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PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS: 



PROSE AND POETRY 



FOR THE USE OF 



BEADING CLUBS 



AND FOR 



PUBLIC AND SOCIAL ENTERTAINMENT. 



MISCELLANEOUS. 



EDITED I^JP 

LEWIS B; MONROE, 



BOSTON: 
LEE AND SHEPARD, PUBLISHERS. 






TWO COPIES RICSIVED, 

tftrary of Co«« Mfc 

SECOND COPY, Of«c. , f ,£, * 

W4V8 - J9«o 

.61448 N 

Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1872, 

By LEWIS B. MONROE, 

In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington. 

Copyright, 1900, by Adeline F. Monroe. 




All Rights Reserved. 



Miscellaneous Readings. 



NorfoontJ $kbb : 
Berwick & Smith, Norwood, Mass., U.S.A. 



PREFACE. 



IN my position as teacher of elocution, I have been 
the recipient of numerous letters from amateur 
Keaders, members of literary clubs, and others, asking 
me to name some piece appropriate to a given occa- 
sion. Teachers have desired choice readings for school 
exhibitions. My own public entertainments have been 
followed by verbal or written requests for copies of 
selections which excited the interest of hearers. Such 
appeals were usually for pieces which were not com- 
mon or familiar, and of which I possessed perhaps but 
a manuscript copy. I was therefore put to the task 
of transcribing the desired pieces over and over again, 
or forced to the ungracious duty of denying the very 
proper request, for want of time to comply with it. 
These solicitations were very frequently accompanied by 
offers of compensation ; but manifestly no price could be 
set on what — though costing much time and trouble 
when so multiplied — was in any individual case a mere 
courtesy. I was led, therefore, to think that a book made 
up in the main of selections which had proved entertain- 
ing to- public audiences, or literary or social circles, might 
be acceptable to the public at large. 



IV PREFACE. 

The unexpectedly cordial welcome extended to my first 
volume — Humorous Eeadings — encourages me to fol- 
low out my intentions by adding the present one. The 
selections herein are mostly of a serious character, — 
patriotic, pathetic, tragic, — with now and then the 
contrast of a lively narrative or choice bit of humor. 
While a few established favorites are included in this 
collection, by far the largest part is made up of pieces 
not to be found in any other compilation. My object 
has been, not to furnish a volume of familiar elegant 
extracts for the student, or rhetorical compositions for 
declaimers, but to bring together mostly fresh and rare 
productions which afford gratification when read or 
recited aloud. I trust that the volume may prove 
serviceable in promoting intelligent recreation in the 
social and public assembly. 

In compliance with many requests it is my purpose, 
in completing the series, to prepare a volume of fresh 
and sparkling dialogues and brief dramas. 

I thankfully acknowledge the courtesy of the distin- 
guished authors and publishers, by whose consent copy- 
right selections have been used in these pages. I am 
particularly indebted to Messrs. J. E. Osgood & Co. for 
permission to use extracts from their editions of the 
works of leading American authors. 

L. B. M. 



CONTENTS 



♦ 

Paob 

The Poor Fisher Folk Victor Hugo .... 1 

A Young Desperado T. B. Aldrich .... 7 

Charlie Machree William J. Hoppin . . 14 

Our Folks Ethel Lynn .... 17 

What will become of the Children? . Jennie June .... 19 

The Starling Robert Buchanan ... 21 

The Relief of Lucknow Robert Lowell .... 23 

The Bells of Shandon Rev. Francis Mahony . 26 

The Lark in the Gold-Fields. I. . . . Charles Reade .... 28 

The Lark in the Gold-Fields. II. . . . Charles Reade .... 34 

The Face against the Pane T. B. Aldrich .... 38 

The Lover and Birds William Allinghatn . . 41 

The High Tide Jean Ingelow .... 42 

Sandalphon, the Angel of Prayer . . H. W. Longfellow . . 46 

'Biah Cathcart's Proposal H. W. Beecher*- ... 48 

Langley Lane Robert Buchanan ... 50 

At the Grindstone ; or, A Home View of 

the Battle-Field Robert Buchanan . . 53 

The Pilot J. B. Gough .... 55 

Wainamoinen's Sowing John A. Porter, M. D. . 56 

The Witch's Daughter J. G. Whittier ... 60 

The Horseback Ride Grace Greenwood . . 65 

The Veiled Picture 66 

The Shd? on Fire Henry Bateman ... 67 

Song of the River 72 

The Fate of Macgregor James Hogg . . . . 73 



VI 



CONTENTS. 



Scene in an Irish School Gerald Griffin . 

Ships at Sea Barry Gray. . 

Old Chums Alice Cary . . 

The Old Man's Prayer Jean Ingelow . 

War's End A. Melville Bell 

The Pilgrims J. G. Whittier 

Knocked about Daniel Connolly 

The Laborer William, D. Gallagher 

The Gray Forest Eagle A. B. Street . . . 

When Mary was a Lassie 

The Piano Mania Jennie June . . . 

Fontenoy Thomas Davis . . 

Beautiful Snow J. W. Watson . . 

Love lightens Labor . 

The Ring G. E. Lessing . . 

The Merry Soap- Boiler 

Death of Poor Jo Dickens .... 

Address of Leonddas Richard Glover . . 

Annabel Lee Edgar A. Poe . . 

Boy Lost 

Borrioboola Gha 0. Goodrich . . . 

The Old Apple- Woman ... 

The Vagabonds J. T. Trowbridge . 

Outward Bound William Allingham . 

Digging for Hidden Treasure .... Charles Reade . . 

The Old Sergeant Forceythe Willson . 

Little Goldenhair 

How's my Boy? S. Dobell .... 

John Valjohn and the Savoyard . . . Victor Hugo . . . 

Shamus O'Brien J. S. Le Fanu . . 

Come up from the Fields, Father! . . Walt Whitman . . 

Jupiter and Ten J. T. Fields . . . 

Jeanie Deans and Queen Caroline . . . Walter Scott . . . 
Our Sister Household Words . 



76 

83 

85 

86 

89 

91 

93 

94 

96 

98 

9& 

101 

104 

106 

10> 

110 

113 

116 

117 

119 

121 

123 

125 

128 

129 

132 

138 

139 

141 

145 

151 

153 

155 

158 



CONTENTS. VU 

The Battle Schiller 159 

The Young Gray Head Blackwood's Magazine 161 

Bob Cratchit's Dinner Dickens 170 

The Little Boy that Died J. D. Robinson . . . 174 

King Canute and his Nobles Dr. Wolcott .... 176 

Hannah Binding Shoes Lucy Larcom ... 177 

The Regiment's Return E.J. Cutler .... 179 

Enlisting as Army Nurse Louisa M. Alcott . . 180 

Mother and Poet Mrs. Browning . . . 183 

Fetching Water from the Well 186 

The Pumpkin J. G. Whittier ... 188 

Civil War C. D. Shanley. ... 189 

Patient Joe 190 

The Canal-Boat Harriet Beecher Stoxoe 193 

The Loss of the Hornet 200 

Wounded J. W. Watson . . . 202 

How Kaiser Wilhelm's Sister was won 204 

A Legend of Bregenz Adelaide Procter . . 211 

The Voices at the Throne T. Westwood .... 216 

Abou El Mahr and his Horse Alger's Oriental Poetry 218 

Under the Snow 223 

Hats Oliver Wendell Holmes 224 

An Order for a Picture Alice Cary .... 226 

Barbara Alexander Smith . . 229 

The Boat of Grass Miss Kemble Butler . 231 

The Idiot Boy Southey 235 

The Mad Engineer 237 

Rock me to sleep Mrs. Akers .... 244 

The Bridge of Sighs Hood 245 

Mona's Waters 249 

Higher Views of the Union Wendell Phillips . . . 252 

The Bells Edgar A. Poe . . . 254 

The Drum-Call in 1861 E.J. Cutler .... 257 

The Galley-Slave Henry Abbey .... 259 



VU1 CONTENTS. 

The Diver Schiller 261 

Death of Leonidas Croly 266 

My Experience in Elocution John Neal 268 

The Kingdom Lizzie Doten .... 271 

The Song of the Cossack to his Horse. Beranger 274 

Dorothy in the Garret J. T. Trowbridge . . 276 

Ravenswood and Lucy Ashton .... Scott 280 

The Silent Tower of Bottreaux 287 

The Hireling Swiss Regiment . . * . . Victor Hugo .... 289 

The Avenging Childe Lockhart 291 

Fair Sufferers 293 

Appledore in a Storm . J. R. LoweU .... 295 

I Hold Still . Julius Sturm .... 297 

A Thanksgiving Dinner Mrs. Ann S. Stephens 298 

The Wolves J. T. Trowbridge . . 304 

The Banner of the Covenanters . . . C. E. Norton .... 306 

Herve Riel Robert Browning . . 308 

The Besieged Castle Scott 313 

A Vision of Battle S. Dobell 323 

Harmosan Dean Trench. ... 327 

Our Country Saved J. R. LoweU .... 329 

The Blue and the Gray F. M. Finch. ... 330 

The Sentry on the Tower Sacristan's Household . 332 

Betsy and I are out Will M. Cdrleton . . 340 

The Volunteer's Wife M. A. Dennison . . . 343 

The Robber 344 

Kit Carson's Ride. .....*... Joaquin Miller ... 347 

The Voice Forceythe Willson . . 351 



PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 



THE POOR FISHER FOLK. — Victor Hugo. 

Translated by Rev. H. W. Alexander. 

'HPI IS night ; within the close-shut cabin-door 

-L The room is wrapped in shade, save where there fall 
Some twilight rays that creep along the floor, 
And show the fisher's nets upon the wall. 

In the dim corner, from the oaken chest 
A few white dishes glimmer ; through the shade 
Stands a tall bed with dusky curtains dressed, 
And a rough mattress at its side is laid. 

Five children on the long low mattress lie, — 
A nest of little souls, it heaves with dreams ; 
In the high chimney the last embers die, 
And redden the dark roof with crimson gleams. 

The mother kneels and thinks, and, pale with fear, 
She prays alone, hearing the billows shout ; 
While to wild winds, to rocks, to midnight drear, 
The ominous old ocean sobs without. 

Poor wives of fishers ! Ah, 't is sad to say, 
Our sons, our husbands, all that we love best, 
Our hearts, our souls, are on those waves away, — 
Those ravening wolves that know nor ruth nor rest. 



2 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Think how they sport with those beloved forms, 
^ And how the clarion-blowing wind unties 
Above their heads the tresses of the storms : 
Perchance even now the child, the husband dies ! 

For we can never tell where they may be 
Who, to make head against the tide and gale, 
Between them and the starless, soundless sea, 
Have but one bit of plank, with one poor sail. 

Terrible fear ! We seek the pebbly shore, ■ 

Cry to the rising billows, " Bring them home." 
Alas ! what answer gives their troubled roar 
To the dark thought that haunts us as we roam 1 

Janet is sad : her husband is alone, 

Wrapped in the black shroud of this bitter night : 

His children are so little, there is none 

To give him aid. " Were they but old, they might." 

Ah, mother, when they too are on the main, 

How wilt thou weep, " Would they were young again ! n 

She takes her lantern, — 't is his hour at last ; 
She will go forth, and see if the day breaks, 
And if his signal-fire be at the mast ; 
Ah no, — not yet I — no breath of morning wake&. 

No line of light o'er the dark waters lies ; 

It rains, it rains, — how black is rain at morn ! 

The day comes trembling, and the young dawn cries, — 

Cries like a baby fearing to be born. 

Sudden her human eyes, that peer and watch 
Through the deep shade, a mouldering dwelling find. 
No light within, — the thin door shakes, — the thatch 
O'er the green walls is twisted of the wind, 



THE POOR FISHER FOLK. 

Yellow and dirty as a swollen rill. 

u Ah me," she saith, "here doth that widow dwell; 

Few days ago my good man left her iU ; 

I will go in and see if all be well." 

She strikes the door, she listens ; none replies, 
And Janet shudders. " Husbandless, alone, 
And with two children, — they have scant supplies, - 
Good neighbor ! She sleeps heavy as a stone." 

She calls again, she knocks ; 't is silence still, — 
No sound, no answer ; suddenly the door, 
As if the senseless creature felt some thrill 
Of pity, turned, and open lay before. 

She entered, and her lantern lighted all 
The house so still, but for the rude waves' din. 
Through the thin roof the plashing rain-drops fall, 
But something terrible is couched within. 

Half clothed, dark-featured, motionless lay she, 
The once strong mother, now devoid of life ; 
Dishevelled spectre of dead misery, — 
All that the poor leaves after his long strife. 

The cold and livid arm, already stiff, 

Hung o'er the soaked straw of her wretched bed. 

The mouth lay open horribly, as if 

The parting soul with a great cry had fled, — 

That cry of death which startles the dim ear 
Of vast eternity. And all the while 
Two little children, in one cradle near, 
Slept face to face, on each sweet face a smile. 

The dying mother o'er them, as they lay, 

Had cast her gown, and wrapped her mantle's fold ; 



PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Feeling chill death creep up, she willed that thej 
Should yet be warm while she was lying cold* 

Rocked by their own weight, sweetly sleep the twain, 
With even breath, and foreheads calm and clear ; 
So sound that the last trump might call in vain, 
For, being innocent, they have no fear. 

Still howls the wind, and ever a drop slides 
Through the old rafters, where the thatch is weak. 
On the dead woman's face it falls, and glides 
Like living tears along her hollow cheek. 

And the dull wave sounds ever like a bell. 
The dead lies still, and listens to the strain ; 
For when the radiant spirit leaves its shell, 
The poor corpse seems to call it back again. 

It seeks the soul through the air's dim expanse, 
And the pale lip saith to the sunken eye, 
" Where is the beauty of thy kindling glance 1 " 
"And where thy balmy breath 1 " it makes reply. 

Alas ! live, love, find primroses in spring, 
Fate hath one end for festival and tear. 
Bid your hearts vibrate, let your glasses ring , 
But as dark ocean drinks each streamlet clear, 

So for the kisses that delight the flesh, 

For mother's worship, and for children's bloom, 

For song, for smile, for love so fair and fresh, 

For laugh, for dance, there is one goal, — the tomb. 

And why does Janet pass so fast away 1 
What hath she done within that house of dread ] 
What foldeth she beneath her mantle gray % 
And hurries home, and hides it in her bed 1 
With half-averted face, and nervous tread, 
What hath she stolen from the awful dead 1 



THE POOR FISHER FOLK. 5 

The dawn was whitening over the sea's verge 
As she sat pensive, touching broken chords 
Of half-remorseful thought, while the hoarse surge 
Howled a sad concert to her broken words. 

"Ah, my poor husband ! we had five before ; 
Already so much care, so much to find, 
For he must work for all. I give him more. 
What was that noise 1 His step 1 Ah no, the wind. 

" That I should be afraid of him I love ! 
I have done ill. If he should beat me now, 
I would not blame him. Did not the door move 1 
Not yet, poor man." She sits with careful brow, 
Wrapped in her inward grief; nor hears the roar 
Of winds and waves that dash against his prow, 
Nor the black cormorant shrieking on the shore. 

Sudden the door flies open wide, and lets 
Noisily in the dawn-light scarcely clear, 
And the good fisher dragging his damp nets 
Stands on the threshold with a joyous cheer. 

" 'T is thou ! " she cries, and eager as a lover 
Leaps up, and holds her husband to her breast ; 
Her greeting kisses all his vesture cover. 
" 'T is I, good wife ! " and his broad face expressed 

How gay his heart that Janet's love made light. 

" What weather was it V 1 "Hard." "Your fishing V "Bad. 

The sea was like a nest of thieves to-night ; 

But I embrace thee, and my heart is glad. 

" There was a devil in the wind that blew ; 
I tore my net, caught nothing, broke my line, 
And once I thought the bark was broken too ; 
What did you all the night long, Janet mine 1 " 



PUBLIC AND PARLOE READINGS. 

She, trembling in the darkness, answered, " I ? 
0, naught ! I sewed, I watched, I was afraid ; 
The waves were loud as thunders from the sky : 
But it is over." Shyly then she said : — 

" Our neighbor died last night ; it must have been 
When you were gone. She left two little ones, 
So small, so frail, — William and Madeline ; 
The one just lisps, the other scarcely runs." 

The man looked grave, and in the corner cast 
His old fur bonnet, wet with rain and sea ; 
Muttered awhile, and scratched his head, — at last, 
" We have five children, this makes seven," said he. 

" Already in bad weather we must sleep 
Sometimes without our supper. Now — Ah, well, 
'T is not my fault. These accidents are deep ; 
It was the good God's will. I cannot tell. 

" Why did he take the mother from those scraps, 
No bigger than my fist 1 'T is hard to read ; 
A learned man might understand perhaps, — 
So little, they can neither work nor need. 

" Go fetch them, wife ; they will be frightened sore, 
If with the dead alone they waken thus ; 
That was the mother knocking at our door, 
And we must take the children home to us. 

"Brother and sister shall they be to ours, 
And they shall learn to climb my knee at even. 
W T hen He shall see these strangers in our bowers, 
More fish, more food will give the God of heaven. 

" I will work harder ; I will drink no wine — 
Go fetch them. Wherefore dost thou linger, dear 1 
Not thus were wont to move those feet of thine." 
She drew the curtain, saying, " They are here." 



A YOUNG DESPERADO. 



A YOUNG DESPERADO. — T. B. Aldrich. 

WHEN Johnny is all snugly curled up in bed, with his 
rosy cheek resting on one of his scratched and grimy 
little hands, forming altogether a perfect picture of peace 
and innocence, it seems hard to realize what a busy, restive, 
pugnacious, badly ingenious little wretch he is ! There is 
something so comical in those funny little shoes and stockings 
sprawling on the floor, — they look as if they could jump 
up and run off, if they wanted to, — there is something so 
laughable about those little trousers, which appear to be 
making vain attempts to climb up into the easy-chair, — the 
said trousers still retaining the shape of Johnny's little legs, 
and refusing -to go to sleep, — there is something, I say, 
about these things, and about Johnny himself, which makes 
it difficult for me to remember that, when Johnny is awake, 
he not unfrequently displays traits of character not to be 
compared with anything but the cunning of an Indian war- 
rior, combined with the combative qualities of a trained prize- 
fighter. 

I 'm sure I don't know how he came by such unpleasant 
propensities. I am myself the meekest of men. Of course, 
I don't mean to imply that Johnny inherited his warlike dis- 
position from his mother. She is the gentlest of women. 
But when you come to Johnny — he 's the terror of the whole 
neighborhood. 

He was meek enough at first, — that is to say, for the 
first six or seven days of his existence. But I verily believe 
that he was n't more than eleven days old when he showed 
a degree of temper that shocked me, — shocked me in 
one so young. On that occasion he turned very red in 
the face, — he was quite red before, — doubled up his ri- 
diculous hands in the most threatening manner, and final- 
ly, in the impotency of rage, punched himself in the eye. 
When I think of the life he led his mother and Su- 
san during the first eighteen months after his arrival; 



8 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

I shrink from the responsibility of allowing Johnny to call 
me father. 

Johnny's aggressive disposition was not more early devel- 
oped than his duplicity. By the time he was two years of 
age I had got the following maxim by heart : " Whenever J. 
is particularly quiet, look out for squalls." He was sure to be 
in some mischief. And I must say there was a novelty, an 
unexpectedness, an ingenuity, in his badness that constantly 
astonished me. The crimes he committed could be arranged 
alphabetically. He never repeated himself. His evil re- 
sources were inexhaustible. He never did the thing I ex- 
pected he would. He never failed to do the thing I was 
unprepared for. I am not thinking so much of the time 
when he painted my writing-desk with raspberry jam, as of 
the occasion when he perpetrated an act of original cruelty 
on Mopsey, a favorite kitten in the household. We were 
sitting in the library. Johnny was playing in the front hall. 
In view of the supernatural stillness that reigned, I re- 
marked, suspiciously, " Johnny is very quiet, my dear." At 
that moment a series of pathetic mews was heard in the 
entry, followed by a violent scratching on the oil-cloth. Then 
Mopsey bounded into the room with three empty spools 
strung upon her tail. The spools were removed with great 
difficulty, especially the last one, which fitted remarkably 
tight. After that, Mopsey never saw a work-basket without 
arching her tortoise-shell back, and distending her tail to 
three times its natural thickness. Another child would have 
squeezed the kitten, or stuck a pin in it, or twisted her tail ; 
but it was reserved for the superior genius of Johnny to 
string rather small spools upon it. He never did the obvious 
thing. 

It was this fertility and happiness, if I may say so, of in- 
vention, that prevented me from being entirely dejected over 
my son's behavior at this period. Sometimes the temptation 
to seize him and shake him was too strong for poor human 
nature. But I always regretted it afterwards. When I saw 
him asleep in his tiny bed, with one tear dried on his plump 



A YOUNG DESPERADO. 9 

velvety cheek and two little mice-teeth visible through the 
parted lips, I could n't help thinking what a little bit of a 
fellow he was, with his funny little fingers and his funny 
little nails ; and it did n't seem to me that he was the sort 
of person to be pitched into by a great strong man like me. 

" When Johnny grows older," I used to say to his mother, 
" I '11 reason with him." 

Now I don't know when Johnny will grow old enough to 
be reasoned with. When I reflect how hard it is to reason 
with wise grown-up people, if they happen to be unwilling to 
accept your view of matters, I am inclined to be very patient 
with Johnny, whose experience is rather limited, after all, 
though he is six years and a half old, and naturally wants to 
know why and wherefore. Somebody says something about 
the duty of " blind obedience." I can't expect Johnny to 
have more wisdom than Solomon, and to be more philosophic 
than the philosophers. 

At times, indeed, I have been led to expect this from him. 
He has shown a depth of mind that warranted me in looking 
for anything. At times he seems as if he were a hundred 
years old. He has a quaint, bird-like way of cocking his 
head on one side, and asking a question that appears to be 
the result of years of study. If I could answer some of those 
questions, I should solve the darkest mysteries of life and 
death. His inquiries, however, generally have a grotesque 
flavor. One night, when the mosquitoes were making lively 
raids on his person, he appealed to me, suddenly : " How does 
the moon feel when a skeeter bites it 1 " To his meditative 
mind, the broad, smooth surface of the moon presented a 
temptation not to be resisted by any stray skeeter. 

I freely confess that Johnny is now and then too much for 
me. I wish I could read him as cleverly as he reads me. 
He knows all my weak points ; he sees right through me, and 
makes me feel that I am a helpless infant in his adroit hands. 
He has an argumentative, oracular air, when things have gone 
wrong, which always upsets my dignity. Yet how cunningly 
he uses his power ! It is only in the last extremity that 



10 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

he crosses his legs, puts his hands into his trousers -pockets, 
and argues the case with me. One day last week he was very 
near coming to grief. By my directions, kindling-wood and 
coal are placed every morning in the library grate, in order 
that I may have a fire the moment I return at night. 
Master Johnny must needs apply a lighted match to this 
arrangement early in the forenoon. The fire was not dis- 
covered until the blower was one mass of red-hot iron, 
and the wooden mantel-piece was smoking with the in- 
tense heat. 

When I came home, Johnny was led from the store-room, 
where he had been imprisoned from an early period, and 
where he had employed himself in eating about two dollars' 
worth of preserved pears. 

" Johnny," said I, in as severe a tone as one could use in 
addressing a person whose forehead glistened with syrup, — 
" Johnny, don't you remember that I have always told you 
never to meddle with matches 1 " 

It was something delicious to see Johnny trying to remem- 
ber. He cast one eye meditatively up to the ceiling, then 
he fixed it abstractedly on the canary-bird, then he rubbed 
his ruffled brows with a sticky hand ; but really, for the 
life of him, he could n't recall any injunctions concerning 
matches. 

" I can't, papa, truly, truly," said Johnny at length. " I 
guess I must have forgot it." 

"Well, Johnny, in order that you may not forget it in 
future — " 

Here Johnny was seized with an idea. He interrupted 
me. 

"1 11 tell you what you do, papa, — you just put it down in 
writin\" 

With the air of a man who has settled a question definitely, 
but at the same time is willing to listen politely to any crude 
suggestions that you may have to throw out, Johnny crossed 
his legs, and thrust his hands into those wonderful trousers- 
pockets. I turned my face aside, for I felt a certain weakness 



A YOUNG DESPERADO. 11 

creeping into the corners of my mouth. I was lost. In an 
instant the little head, covered all over with yellow curls, was 
laid upon my knee, and Johnny was crying, " I 'm so very, 
very sorry ! " 

I have said that Johnny is the terror of the neighborhood. 
I think I have not done the young gentleman an injustice. 
If there is a window broken within the radius of two miles 
from our house, Johnny's ball, or a stone known to come from 
his dexterous hand, is almost certain to be found in the bat- 
tered premises. I never hear the musical jingling of splin- 
tered glass, but my porte-monnaie gives a convulsive throb in 
my breast-pocket. There is not a doorstep in our street that 
has n't borne evidences in red chalk of his artistic ability j 
there is n't a bell that he has n't rung and run away from 
at least three hundred times. Scarcely a day passes but he 
falls out of something, or over something, or into something. 
A ladder running up to the dizzy roof of an unfinished build- 
ing is no more to be resisted by him than the back platform 
of a horse-car, when the conductor is collecting his fare in 
front. 

I should not like to enumerate the battles that Johnny has 
fought during the past eight months. It is a physical impos- 
sibility, I should judge, for him to refuse a challenge. He 
picks his enemies out of all ranks of society. He has fought 
the ash-man's boy, the grocer's boy, the rich boys over the 
way, and any number of miscellaneous boys who chanced to 
stray into our street. 

I can't say that this young desperado is always victorious. 
I have known the tip of his nose to be in a state of unpleas- 
ant redness for weeks together. I have known him to come 
home frequently with no brim to his hat ; once he presented 
himself with only one shoe, on which occasion his jacket was 
split up the back in a manner that gave him the appearance 
of an over-ripe chestnut bursting out of its bur. How 
he will fight ! But this I can say, — if Johnny is as cruel 
as Caligula, he is every bit as brave as Agamemnon. I 
never knew him to strike a boy smaller than himself. I 



12 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

never knew him to tell a lie when a lie would save him from 
disaster. 

At present the General, as I sometimes call him, is in hos- 
pital. He was seriously wounded at the battle of The Little 
Go-Cart, on the 9th instant. On returning from my office 
3 T esterday evening, I found that scarred veteran stretched 
upon a sofa in the sitting-room, with a patch of brown paper 
stuck over his left eye, and a convicting smell of vinegar 
about him. 

" Yes," said his mother, dolefully, " Johnny 's been fighting 
again. That horrid Barnabee boy (who is eight years old, if 
he is a day) won't let the child alone." 

"Well," said I, " I hope Johnny gave that Barnabee boy a 
thrashing." 

"Did n't I, though 1 ?" cries Johnny, from the sofa, "/bet!" 

" Johnny ! " says his mother. 

Now, several days previous to this, I had addressed the 
General in the following terms : — 

" Johnny, if I ever catch you in another fight of your own 
seeking, I shall cane you." 

In consequence of this declaration, it became my duty to 
look into the circumstances of the present affair, which will 
be known in history as the battle of The Little Go-Cart. 
After going over the ground very carefully, I found the fol- 
lowing to be the state of the case. 

It seems that the Barnabee Boy — I speak of him as if he 
w T ere the Benicia Boy — is the oldest pupil in the Primary 
Military School (I think it must be a military school) of which 
Johnny is a recent member. This Barnabee, having whipped 
every one of his companions, was sighing for new boys to 
conquer, when Johnny joined the institution. He at once 
made friendly overtures of battle to Johnny, who, oddly 
enough, seemed indisposed to encourage his advances. Then 
Barnabee began a series of petty persecutions, which had 
continued up to the day of the fight. 

On the morning of that eventful day the Barnabee Boy ap- 
peared in the school-yard with a small go-cart. After running 



A YOUNG DESPERADO. 



13 



down on Johnny several times with this useful vehicle, he 
captured Johnny's cap, filled it with sand, and dragged it up 
and down the yard triumphantly in the go-cart. This made 
the General very angry, of course, and he took an early op- 
portunity of kicking over the triumphal car, in doing which 
he kicked one of the wheels so far into space that it has not 
been seen since. 

This brought matters to a crisis. The battle would have 
taken place then and there ; but at that moment the school- 
bell rang, and the gladiators were obliged to give their atten- 
tion to Smith's Speller. But a gloom hung over the morn- 
ing's exercises, — a gloom that was not dispelled in the back 
row, when the Barnabee Boy stealthily held up to Johnny's 
vision a slate, whereon was inscribed this fearful message : — 




Johnny got it " put down in writin' " this time ! 

After a hasty glance at the slate, the General went on with 
his studies composedly enough. Eleven o'clock came, and 
with it came recess, and with recess the inevitable battle. 

Now I do not intend to describe the details of this brilliant 
action, for the sufficient reason that, though there were seven 
young gentlemen (connected with the Primary School) on the 
field as war correspondents, their accounts of the engagement 
are so contradictory as to be utterly worthless. On one point 
they all agree, — that the contest was sharp, short, and de- 
cisive. The truth is, the General is a quick, wiry, experienced 
old hero ; and it did n't take him long to rout the Barnabee 



14 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Boy, who was in reality a coward, as all bullies and tyrants 
ever have been, and always will be. 

I don't approve of boys fighting ; I don't defend Johnny ; 
but if the General wants an extra ration or two of preserved 
pear, he shall have it ! 

I am well aware that, socially speaking, Johnny is a Black 
Sheep. I know that I have brought him up badly, and that 
there is not an unmarried man or woman in the United States 
who would n't have brought him up very differently. It 's a 
great pity that the only people who know how to manage 
children never have any ! At the same time, Johnny is not 
a black sheep all over. He has some white spots. His sins 
— if wiser folks had no greater ! — are the result of too much 
animal life. They belong to his evanescent youth, and will 
pass away ; but his honesty, his generosity, his bravery, 
belong to his character, and are enduring qualities. The 
quickly crowding years will tame him. A good large pane 
of glass, or a seductive bell-knob, ceases in time to have 
attractions for the most reckless spirit. And I am quite con- 
fident that Johnny will be a great statesman, or a valorous 
soldier, or, at all events, a good citizen, after he has got over 
being A Young Desperado. 



CHARLIE MACHREE.— William J. Hoppin. 
A BALLAD. 

COME over, come over 
The river to me, 
If ye are my laddie, 
Bold Charlie Machree. 

Here 's Mary McPherson 
And Susy O'Linn, 
Who say, ye 're faint-hearted, 
And darena plunge in. 



CHARLIE MACHREE. 15 

But the dark rolling water, 
Though deep as the sea, 
I know willna seare ye, 
Nor keep ye frae me ; 

For stout is yer back, 
And strong is yer arm, 
And the heart in yer bosom 
Is faithful and warm. 

Come over, come over 
The river to me, 
If ye are my laddie, 
Bold Charlie Machree J 

I see him, I see him. 
He 's plunged in the tide, 
His strong arms are dashing 
The big waves aside. 

the dark rolling water 
Shoots swift as the sea, 
But blithe is the glance 
Of his bonny blue e'e ; 

And his cheeks are like roses, 
Twa buds on a bough ; 
Who says ye 're faint-hearted. 
My brave Charlie, now ] 

Ho, ho, foaming river, 
Ye may roar as ye go, 
But ye canna bear Charlie 
To the dark loch below ! 

Come over, come over 
The river to me, 



16 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS 

My true-hearted laddie, 
My Charlie Machree ! 

He 's sinking, he 's sinking; 
0, what shall I do ! 
Strike out, Charlie, boldly, 
Ten strokes and ye 're thro'. 

He 's sinking, Heaven ! 
Ne'er fear, man, ne'er fear ; 
I 've a kiss for ye, Charlie, 
As soon as ye 're here ! 

He rises, I see him, — 
Five strokes, Charlie, mair, -^ 
He 's shaking the wet 
From his bonny brown hair j 

He conquers the current, 
He gains on the sea, — 
Ho, where is the swimmer 
Like Charlie Machree ! 

Come over the river, 
But once come to me, 
And I '11 love ye forever, 
Dear Charlie Machree. 

He 's sinking, he 's gone, — 
God, it is I, 

It is I, who have killed him — 
Help, help ! — he must die. 

Help, help ! — ah, he rises, — 
Strike out and ye 're free. 
Ho, bravely done, Charlie, 
Once more now, for me ! 



OUR FOLKS. 17 

Now cling to the rock, 
Now gie us yer hand, — 
Ye 're safe, dearest Charlie, 
Ye 're safe on the land ! 

Come rest in my bosom, 
If there ye can sleep ; 
I canna speak to ye, 
I only can weep. 

Ye 've crossed the wild river, 
Ye 've risked all for me, 
And I '11 part frae ye never, 
Dear Charlie Machree ! 



OUR FOLKS. — Ethel Lynn. 

" TJI I Harry Holly ! Halt, — and tell 
J — L A fellow just a thing or two ; 
You 've had a furlough, been to see 

How all the folks in Jersey do. 
It 's months ago since I was there, — 

I, and a bullet from Fair Oaks. 
When you were home, — old comrade, say, 

Did you see any of our folks 1 

11 You did 1 Shake hands, — 0, ain't I glad ; 

For if I do look grim and rough, 
I 've got some feelin' — 

People think 

A soldier's heart is mighty tough ; 
But, Harry, when the bullets fly, 

And hot saltpetre flames and smokes, 
While whole battalions lie afield, 

One 's apt to think about his folks. 



18 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

11 And so you saw them — when ] and where 1 

The old man — is he hearty yet 1 
And mother — does she fade at all] 

Or does she seem to pine and fret 
For me 1 And Sis 1 — has she grown tall % 

And did you see her friend — you know 
That Annie Moss — 

(How this pipe chokes !) 
Where did you see her ] — tell me, Hal, 

A lot of news about our folks. 

u You saw them in the church — yet say ; 

It 's likely, for they 're always there. 
Not Sunday] no] A funeral] Who] 

Who, Harry 1 how you shake and stare ! 
All well, you say, and all were out. 

W T hat ails you, Hal 1 Is this a hoax ] 
Why don't you tell me, like a man, 

What is the matter with our folks ] " 

" I said all well, old comrade, true ; 

I say all well, for He knows best 
Who takes the young ones in his arms, 

Before the sun goes to the west. 
The axe-man Death deals right and left, 

And flowers fall as well as oaks ; 
And so — 

Fair Annie blooms no more ! 
And that 's the matter with your folks. 

" See, this long curl was kept for you ; 

And this white blossom from her breast ; 
And here — your sister Bessie wrote 

A letter, telling all the rest. 
Bear up, old friend." 

Nobody speaks \ 



WHAT WILL BECOME OF THE CHILDREN? 19 

Only the old camp-raven croaks, 
And soldiers whisper : 

" Boys, be still ; 
There 's some bad news from Grainger's folks." 

He turns his back — the only foe 

That ever saw it — on this grief, 
And, as men will, keeps down the tears 

Kind Nature sends to Woe's relief. 
Then answers he : 

"Ah, Hal, I'll try; 

But in my throat there 's something chokes, 
Because, you see, I 've thought so long 

To count her in among our folks. 

" I s'pose she must be happy now, 

But still I will keep thinking too, 
I could have kept all trouble off, 

By being tender, kind, and true. 
But maybe not. 

She 's safe up there, 

And when the Hand deals other strokes, 
She '11 stand by Heaven's gate, I know, 

And wait to welcome in our folks." 



WHAT WILL BECOME OF THE CHILDREN? — 
Jennie June. 

"IV /4TRS. NIPKIN, West Twenty-Fifth Street, has 
JA-L rooms on the third story, which she is desirous of 
letting, with board, for the winter, or permanently, to fami- 
lies without children. References exchanged." 

What a delightful woman this Mrs. Nipkin must be ! 
Wonder if she ever had any children of her own, or felt her 
heart beat a single throb quicker at hearing tiny lips lisp 



20 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Mother. Only " families " without children can enjoy the 
pleasure of her society, or the luxury of her third-story 
front, — families which consist of "Mr. So-and-so and lady," 
or " Mr. So-and-so, lady, and servant " ; as if there could be 
a " family " without children ; as if children did not consti- 
tute the very life and hope and joy of a family circle ; as if 
the pain and sorrow which they bring had not its sacred use 
in rooting out hard, vile, selfish, and worldly passions ; as if 
the love they providentially bring with them, as safeguard 
and protection, did not, in its pure devotion and holy disin- 
terestedness, link us to the divine more nearly than any 
other inspiration or instinct of which human nature is sus- 
ceptible. 

" Families without children." Do you know, Mrs. Nipkin, 
how harshly that would grate on the ears of the lately be- 
reaved mother, how coldly and selfishly on the ears of the 
newly made father? Is it conceivable that you were ever 
a child yourself, or, if you were, that you were other than a 
snarling, passionate little vixen, who had managed to daguerre- 
otype the horror with which she inspired others upon her 
own heart and brain, and in later years exhibited the de- 
formed and misshapen product to the world in the form of a 
stupid, unwomanly advertisement. 

And yet it cannot be that yours is a " family without chil- 
dren," Mrs. Nipkin, or you would know the " aching void," 
the desolation of heart, the dreary loneliness of life, the 
vacant spot in the soul, which only the sweet smiles and 
merry laughter of a child can fill ; and you would pine for 
the presence of so pure and innocent a spirit, in order that 
it might serve as a link between your' selfish worldli- 
ness and the holy, spotless character and attributes of your 
Maker. 

It would be interesting to know where you desire to go 
when you die, Mrs. Nipkin; not certainly to the kingdom 
over which Christ reigns, for he called little children to him 
and blessed them, and said of such is the kingdom of heaven ; 
so it is evident you could not make your living there, Mrs. 



THE STARLING. 21 

Nipkin, by furnishing rooms and board to " families without 
children." 

We pity you, poor Mrs. Nipkin. You do not know the 
sweet pleasure of pressing a soft, tiny face against your own, 
of watching its cunning looks and pretty ways, of hearing its 
first effort to pronounce your name, of guiding its trembling 
little feet in their essay to preserve the giddy balance on the 
uncertain floor, of listening to the first lisped prayer to God 
to " bess fader, moder, ittle boder, and sister, and all 'lations, 
and fens, and all the world," even Mrs. Nipkin, who would 
not admit a little child in the dismal precincts of her third 
story. 

Good by, Mrs. Nipkin ; we have no ill-feeling against you ; 
we only hope Heaven will send you a dear little baby to 
soften your heart, and show you the difference between fami- 
lies with and " families without children." 



THE STARLING. — Robert Buchanan. 

THE little lame tailor sat stitching and snarling, 
Who in the world was the tailor's darling 1 
To none of his kind 
Was he well inclined, 
But he doted on Jack the starling. 

For the bird had a tongue, and of words a store, 
And his cage was hung just over the door, 
And he saw the people and heard the roar, — 
Folk coming and going evermore, — 
And he looked at the tailor, — and swore. 

From a country lad the tailor bought him, — 
His training was bad, for tramps had taught him ; 
On alehouse benches his cage had been, 
While louts and wenches made jests obscene, — 



i 



22 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

But he learned, no doubt, his oaths from fellows 
Who travel about with kettle and bellows, 
And three or four, the roundest by far 
That ever he swore, were taught by a tar. 

And the tailor heard. " We '11 be friends ! " said he, 
" You 're a clever bird, and our tastes agree, — 
We both are old, and esteem life base, 
The whole world cold, things out of place, 
And we 're lonely too, and full of care, — 
So what can we do but swear? 

" The devil take you, how you mutter ! — ■ 

Yet there 's much to make you swear and flutter. 

You want the fresh air and the sunlight, lad, 

And your prison there feels dreary and sad, 

And here I frown in a prison dreary, 

Hating the town, and feeling weary : 

We 're too confined, Jack, and we want to fly, 

And you blame mankind, Jack, and so do I ! 

And then, again, by chance as it were, 

We learned from men how to grumble and swear ; 

You let your throat by the scamps be guided, 

And swore by rote, — all just as I did ! 

And without beseeching, relief is brought us, — 

For we 're turning the teaching on those who taught us ! " 

A haggard and ruffled old fellow was Jack, 

With a grim face muffled in ragged black, 

And his coat was rusty and never neat, 

And his wings were dusty from the dismal street, 

And he sidelong peered, with eyes of soot too, 

And scowled and sneered, — and was lame of a foot too ! 

And he longed to go from whence he came ; — 

And the tailor, you know, was just the same. 

All kinds of weather they felt confined, 
And swore together at all mankind ; 



THE RELIEF OF LUCKNOW. 23 

For their mirth was done, and they felt like brothers, 
And the swearing of one meant no more than the other's ; 
T was just a way they had learned, yon see, — 
Each wanted to say only this, — " Woe 's me ! 

I 'm a poor old fellow, 
And I 'in prisoned so, 

While the sun shines mellow, 

And the corn waves yellow, 
And the fresh winds blow, — 
And the folk don't care if I live or die, 
But I long for air, and I wish to fly ! " 
Yet unable to utter it, and too wild to bear, 
They could only mutter it, and swear. 

Many a year they dwelt in the city, 

In their prisons drear, and none felt pity, 

And few were sparing of censure and coldness, 

To hear them swearing with such plain boldness ; 

But at last, by the Lord their noise was stopt, — 

For down on his board the tailor dropt, 

And they found him dead, and done with snarling, 

And over his head still grumbled the starling ; 

But when an old Jew claimed the goods of the tailor, 

And with eye askew eyed the feathery railer, 

And, with a frown at the dirt and rust, 

Took the old cage down, in a shower of dust, — 

Jack, with heart aching, felt life past bearing, 

And, shivering, quaking, all hope forsaking, died swearing. 



THE RELIEF OF LUCKNOW. — Robert Lowell. 

OTHAT last day in Lucknow fort ! 
We knew that it was the last, 
That the enemy's mines had crept surely in,- 
And the end was coming fast. 



24 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

To yield to that foe meant worse than death, 

And the men and we all worked on ; 
It was one day more of smoke and roar, 

And then it would all be done. 

There was one of us, a corporal's wife, 

A fair, young, gentle thing, 
Wasted with fever and with siege, 

And her mind was wandering. 

She lay on the ground, in her Scottish plaid, 

And I took her head on my knee ; 
" When my father comes home frae the pleugh," she said, 

" 0, please then waken me ! " 

She slept like a child on her father's floor, 

In the flecking of woodbine shade, 
When the house-dog sprawls by the half-open dooi; 

And the mother's wheel is stayed. 

It was smoke and roar, and powder stench, 

And hopeless waiting for death ; 
But the soldier's wife, like a full-tired child, 

Seemed scarce to draw her breath. 

I sank to sleep, and I had my dream 

Of an English village lane, 
And wall and garden — till a sudden scream 

Brought me back to the rear again. 

There Jessie Brown stood listening, 

And then a broad gladness broke 
All over her face, and she tooE. my hand, 

And drew me near and spoke : 

" The Highlanders ! 0, dinna ye hear 
The slogan far awa' % 



THE RELIEF OF LUCKNOW. 25 

The McGregors 1 Ah ! I ken it weel ; 
It is the grandest of them a'. 

" God bless the bonny Highlanders ! 

We 're saved ! we 're saved ! " she cried ; 
And fell on her knees, and thanks to God 

Poured forth, like a full flood-tide. 

Along the battery line her cry 

Had fallen among the men ; 
And they started, for they were to die : 

Was life so near them, then 1 

They listened, for life ; and the rattling fire 

Far off, and the far-off roar 
Were all, — and the Colonel shook his head, 

And they turned to their guns once more. 

Then Jessie said, " The slogan 's dune, 

But can ye no hear them noo 1 
The Campbells are comin' ! It 's nae a dream ; 

Our succors hae broken through ! " 

We heard the roar and the rattle afar, 

But the pipers we could not hear ; 
So the men plied their work of hopeless war, 

And knew that the end was near. 

It was not long ere it must be heard, — 

A shrilling, ceaseless sound ; 
It was no noise of the strife afar, 

Or the sappers underground. 

It was the pipe of the Highlanders, 

And now they played " Auld Lang Syne " ; 

It came to our men like the voice of God, 
And they shouted along the line. 



26 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

And they wept and shook each other's hands, 
And the women sobbed in a crowd; 

And every one knelt down where we stood, 
And we all thanked God aloud. 

That happy day, when we welcomed them in, 

Our men put Jessie first ; 
And the General took her hand, and cheers 

From the men like a volley burst. 

And the pipers' ribbons and tartan streamed, 
Marching round and round our line ; 

And our joyful cheers were broken with tears, 
And the pipers played " Auld Lang Syne." 



THE BELLS OF SHANDON. — Rev. Francis Mahony„ 

Sabata pango ; 
Funera plango ; 
Solemnia clango. 

Inscription on an old Bell. 

WITH deep affection 
And recollection, 
I often think of 

Those Shandon Bells, 
Whose sounds so wild would, 
In the days of childhood, 
Fling round my cradle 
Their magic spell. 

On this I ponder 
Where 'er I wander, 
And thus grow fonder, 
Sweet Cork, of thee, 
With thy bells of Shandon 
That sound so grand on 



THE BELLS OF SIIANDON. 27 

The pleasant waters 
Of the river Lee. 

I 've heard bells chiming 
Full many a clime in, 
Tolling sublime in 

Cathedral shrine, 
While at a glib rate 
Brass tongues would vibrate ; 
But all their music 

Spoke naught like thine. 

For memory, dwelling 
On each proud swelling 
Of thy belfry, knelling 

Its bold notes free, 
Made the bells of Shandon 
Sound far more grand on 
The pleasant waters 

Of the river Lee. 

I 've heard bells tolling 
Old Adrian's Mole in, 
Their thunder rolling 

From the Vatican, 
And cymbals glorious 
Swinging uproarious 
In the gorgeous turrets 

Of Notre Dame. 

But thy sounds were sweeter 
Than the dome of Peter 
Flings on the Tiber, 

Pealing solemnly. 
the bells of Shandon 
Sound far more grand on 
The pleasant waters 

Of the river Lee ! 



28 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

There 's a bell in Moscow ; 
While on tower and kiosko 
In Saint Sophia 

The Turkman gets, 
And loud in air 
Calls men to prayer 
From the tapering summit 

Of tall minarets. 

Such empty phantom 
I freely grant them ; 
But there 's an anthem 

More dear to me : 
'T is the bells of Shandon, 
That sound so grand on 
The pleasant waters 

Of the river Lee. 



THE LARK IN THE GOLD-FIELDS. — Charles Reade. 

PAKT FIRST. THE LARK. 

" rpOM, I invite you to a walk." 

-L "Well, George! a walk is a great temptation this 
beautiful day." 

It was the month of January, in Australia ; a blazing-hot 
day was beginning to glow through the freshness of morning ; 
the sky was one cope of pure blue, and the southern air crept 
slowly up, its wings clogged with fragrance, and just tuned 
the trembling leaves, — no more. 

" Is not this pleasant, Tom, — is n't it sweet 1 " 

" I believe you, George ! and what a shame to run down 
such a country as this ! There they come home, and tell you 
the flowers have no smell ; but they keep dark about the trees 
and bushes being haystacks of flowers. Snuff the air as we 
go ; it is a thousand English gardens in one. Look at all 



THE LARK IN THE GOLD-FIELDS. 29 

those tea-scrubs, each with a thousand blossoms on it as sweet 
as honey ; and the golden wattles on the other side, and all 
smelling like seven o'clock. 

" Ay, lad ! it is very refreshing j and it is Sunday, and we 
have got away from the wicked for an hour or two. But in 
England there would be a little white church out yonder, and 
a spire like an angel's forefinger pointing from the grass to 
heaven, and the lads in their clean frocks like snow, and the 
lasses in their white stockings and new shawls, and the old 
women in their scarlet cloaks and black bonnets, all going 
one road, and a tinkle-tinkle from the belfry, that would 
Jurn all these other sounds and colors and sweet smells 
holy as well as fair on the Sabbath morn. Ah, England ! 
Ah"! " 

' ; You will see her again, — no need to sigh. Prejudice be 
hanged, this is a lovely land." 

" So 't is, Tom, so 't is. But I '11 tell you what puts me 
out a little bit ; — nothing is what it sets up for here. If 
you see a ripe pear and go to eat it, it is a lump of hard 
wood. Next comes a thing the very sight of which turns 
your stomach, and that is delicious, — a loquot, for instance. 
There, now, look at that magpie ; well, it is Australia, so that 
magpie is a crow and not a magpie at all. Everything pre- 
tends to be some old friend or other of mine, and turns out 
a stranger. Here is nothing but surprises and deceptions. 
The flowers make a point of not smelling, and the bushes, 
that nobody expects to smell or wants to smell, they smell 
lovely." 

" What does it matter where the smell comes from, so 
that you get it 1 " 

" Why, Tom," replied George, opening his eyes, " it makes 
all the difference. I like to smell a flower, — a flower is not 
complete without smell ; but I don't care if I never smell a 
bush till I die. Then the birds, — they laugh and talk like 
Christians ; they make me split my sides, bless their little 
hearts ! but they won't chirrup. It is Australia ! where every- 
thing is inside-out and topsy-turvy. The animals have four 



PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

legs, so they jump on two. Ten foot square of rock lets for 
a pound a month ; ten acres of grass for a shilling a yean 
Roasted at Christmas, shiver o' cold on midsummer-day. 
The lakes are grass, and the rivers turn their backs on the 
sea and run into the heart of the land ; and the men would 
stand on their heads, but I have taken a thought, and I 've 
found out why they don't." 

"Why?" 

" Because, if they did, their heads would point the same 
way a man's head points in England." 

Tom Robinson laughed, and told George he admired the 
country for these very traits. " Novelty for me against the 
world. Who'd come twelve thousand miles to see nothing 
we could n't see at home 1 One does not want the same story 
always. Where are we going, George 1 " 

" 0, not much farther, — only about twelve miles from 
the camp." 

" Where to 1 " 

" To a farmer I know. I am going to show you a lark, 
Tom," said George, and his eyes beamed benevolence on his 
comrade. 

Robinson stopped dead short. "George," said he, "no! 
don't let us. I would rather stay at home and read my book. 
You can go into temptation and come out pure ; I can't. I 
am one of those that if I go into a puddle up to my shoe, I 
must splash up to my middle." 

" What has that to do with it ? " 

" You 're proposing to me to go for a lark on the Sabbath 
day." 

" Why, Tom, am I the man to tempt you to do evil ? " 
asked George, hurt. 

" Why, no ! but you proposed a lark." 

" Ay, but an innocent one, — one more likely to lift your 
heart on high than to give you ill thoughts." 

" Well, this is a riddle ! " and Robinson was intensely 
puzzled. 

" Carlo ! " cried George, suddenly, " come here ; I will not 



THE LARK IN THE GOLD-FIELDS. 31 

have you hunting and tormenting those Kangaroo rats to-day. 
Let us all be at peace, if you please. Come, to heel." 

The friends strode briskly on, and a little after eleven 
o'clock they came upon a small squatter's house and prem- 
ises. " Here we are," said George, and his eyes glittered with 
innocent delight. 

The house was thatched and whitewashed, and English was 
written on it and on every foot of ground around it. A furze- 
bush had been planted by the door. Vertical oak palings 
were the fence, with a five-barred gate in the middle of them. 
From the little plantation all the magnificent trees and shrubs 
of Australia had been excluded with amazing resolution and 
consistency, and oak and ash reigned, safe from over-towering 
rivals. They passed to the back of the house, and there 
George's countenance fell a little, for on the oval grass-plot 
and gravel-walk he found from thirty to forty rough fellows 
most of them diggers. 

" Ah, well," said he, on reflection, " we could not expect 
to have it all to ourselves, and, indeed, it would be a sin to 
wish it, you know. Now, Tom, come this way ; here it is, 
here it is, — there." Tom looked up, and in a gigantic cage 
was a light-brown bird. 

He was utterly confounded. " What ! is it this we came 
twelve miles to see 1 " 

" Ay ! and twice twelve would n't have been much to 
me." 

" Well, and now where is the lark you talked of? " 

" This is it." 

" This 1 This is a bird." 

" Well, and is n't a lark a bird ? " 

" Oh ! ah, I see ! Ha, ha ! ha, ha ! " 

Robinson's merriment was interrupted by a harsh remon- 
strance from several of the diggers, who were all from the 
other end of the camp. 

" Hold your cackle ! " cried one ; " he is going to sing." 
And the whole party had then- eyes turned with expectation 
towards the bird. 



32 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Like most singers, he kept them waiting a bit. But at 
last, just at noon, when the mistress of the house had war- 
ranted him to sing, the little feathered exile began as it were 
to tune his pipes. The savage men gathered round the cage 
that moment, and amidst a dead stillness the bird uttered 
some very uncertain chirps ; but after a while he seemed to 
revive his memories, and call his ancient cadences back to 
him one by one, and string them sotto voce. 

And then the same sun that had warmed his little heart 
at home came glowing down on him here, and he gave 
music back for it more and more, till at last, amidst 
breathless silence and glistening eyes of the rough diggers 
hanging on his voice, outburst in that distant land his 
English song. 

It swelled his little throat, and gushed from him with 
thrilling force and plenty; and every time he checked his 
song to think of its theme, — the green meadows, the quiet- 
stealing streams, the clover he first soared from, and the 
spring he loved so well, — a loud sigh from many a rough 
bosom, many' a wild and wicked heart, told how tight the lis j 
teners had held their breath to hear him. And when he 
swelled with song again, and poured with all his soul the 
green meadows, the quiet brooks, the honey-clover, and the 
English spring, the rugged mouths opened and so stayed, 
and the shaggy lips trembled, and more than one tear trickled 
from fierce, unbridled hearts down bronzed and rugged 
cheeks. 

Sweet home ! 

And these shaggy men, full of oaths and strife and cupidity, 
had once been white-headed boys, and most of them had 
strolled about the English fields with little sisters and little 
brothers, and seen the lark rise and heard him sing this very 
song. The little playmates lay in the churchyard, and they 
were full of oaths and drink, and lusts and remorses, but no 
note was changed in this immortal song. 

And so, for a moment or two, years of vice rolled away 
like a dark cloud from the memory, and the past shone out 



THE LARK IN THE GOLD-FIELDS. 33 

in the song-shine : they came back bright as the immortal 
notes that lighted them, — those faded pictures and those 
fleeted days ; the cottage, the old mother's when he left her 
without one grain of sorrow, the village church and its simple 
chimes, — ding-dong-bell, ding-dong-bell, ding-dong-bell; the 
clover-field hard by, in which he lay and gambolled while the 
lark praised God overhead ; the chubby playmates that never 
grew to be w T icked ; the sweet, sweet hours of youth, inno- 
cence, and home. 

George stayed till the lark gave up singing altogether, and 
then he said, " Now I am off. I don't want to hear bad lan- 
guage after that ; let us take the lark's chirp home to bed 
with us " ; and they made off. And true it was, — the pure 
strains dwelt upon their spirits, and refreshed and purified 
these sojourners in a godless place. Meeting these two figures 
on Sunday afternoon, armed each with a double-barrelled gun 
and a revolver, you would never have guessed what gentle 
thoughts possessed them wholly. They talked less than they 
did coming, but they felt so quiet and happy. 

" The pretty bird," purred George (seeing him by the ear), 
"I feel after him — there — as if I had just come out o' 
church." 

" So do I, George ; and I think his song must be a psalm, 
if we knew all." 

" That it is, for Heaven taught it him. "VVe must try and 
keep all this in our hearts when we get among the broken 
bottles and foul language and gold," says George. " How 
sweet it smells, — sweeter than before ! " 

" That is because it is afternoon." 

" Yes ! or along of the music ; that tune was a breath 
from home that makes everything please me now. This is 
the first Sunday that has looked and smelled and sounded 
like Sunday." 

" George, it is hard to believe the world is wicked ; every- 
thing seems good and gentle, and at peace with heaven and 
earth." 



34 PUBLIC ASD PARLOR READINGS. 



THE LARK IN THE GOLD-FIELDS. 

PART SECOND. CARLO. 

A JET of smoke issued from the bush, followed by the 
report of a guu, and Carlo, who had taken advantage 
of George's re very to slip on ahead, gave a sharp howl, and 
spun round upon all fours. 

" The scoundrels ! " shrieked Robinson. And in a moment 
his gun was at his shoulder, and he fired both barrels slap 
into the spot whence the smoke had issued. 

Both the men dashed up and sprang into the bush, revolver 
in hand, but ere they could reach it the dastard had run; 
and the scrub was so thick, pursuit was hopeless. The men 
returned, full of anxiety for Carlo. 

The dog met them, his tail between his legs ; but at sight 
of George he wagged his tail, and came to him and licked 
George's hand, and walked on with them, licking George's 
hand every now and then. 

" Look, Tom ! he is as sensible as a Christian. He knows 
the shot was meant for him, though they did n't hit him." 

By this time the men had got out of the wood and pursued 
their road, but not with tranquil hearts. Sunday ended with 
the noise of that coward's gun. They walked on hastily, 
guns ready, fingers on the trigger at w r ar. Suddenly Robin- 
son looked back and stopped, and drew George's attention to 
Carlo. He was standing with all his four legs wide apart, 
like a statue. Geoi-ge called him ; he came directly and was 
for licking George's hand, but George pulled him about and 
examined him all over. 

" I wish they may not have hurt him, after all, the butch- 
ers ; — they have, too ! See here, Tom ! here is one streak 
of blood on his belly ; nothing to hurt, though, I do hope. 
Never mind, Carlo ! " cried George ; "it is only a single shot, 
by what I can see. 'T is n't like when Will put the whole 
charge into you, rabbit-shooting, — is it, Carlo 1 No, says he ; 
we don't care for this, — do we, Carlo ] " cried George, rather 
boisterously. 



THE LABK IN THE GOLD-FIELDS. 35 

" Make him go into that pool there," said Robinson ; "then 
he won't have a fever." 

"I will. Here, — cess! cess!" He threw a stone into 
the pool of water that lay a little off the road, and Carlo 
went in after it without hesitation, though not with his usual 
alacrity. After an unsuccessful attempt to recover tiie stone, 
he swam out lower down, and came back to the men, and 
wagged his tail slowly and walked behind George. 

They went on. 

" Tom," said George, after a pause, " I don't like it." 

" Don't like what 1 " 

" He never so much as shook himself." 

" What of that ? He did shake himself, I should say." 

"'Not as should be. Who ever saw a dog come out of the 
water and not shake himself 1 Carlo ! hie, Carlo ! " and 
George threw a stone along the ground. Carlo trotted after 
it, but his limbs seemed to work stiffly ; the stone spun round 
a sharp corner in the road, — the dog followed it. 

" He will do now," said Robinson. 

They walked briskly on. On turning the corner they found 
Carlo sitting up and shivering, with the stone between his 
paws. 

"We must not let him sit," said Tom; "keep his blood 
warm. I don't think we ought to have sent him into the 
water." 

" I don't know," muttered George, gloomily. " Carlo ! " 
cried he, cheerfully, "don't you be down-hearted; there is 
nothing so bad as faint-heartedness for man or beast. Come, 
up and away ye go, and shake it off like a man ! " 

Carlo got up and wagged his tail in answer, but he evi- 
dently was in no mood for running ; he followed languidly 
behind. 

"Let us get home," said Robinson ; " there is an old pal of 
mine that is clever about dogs ; he will cut the shot out, if 
there is one in him, and give him some physic." 

The men strode on, and each, to hide his own uneasiness, 
chatted about other matters ; but, all of a sudden, Robinson 



36 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

cried out, "Why, where is the dog?" They looked backj 
and there was Carlo some sixty yards in the rear, but he waa 
uot sitting this time, — he was lying on his belly. 

" 0, this is a bad job ! " cried George. The men ran up, in 
real alarm ; Carlo wagged his tail as soon as they came near 
him, but he did not get up. 

" Carlo ! " cried George, despairingly, " you would n't do it, 
you could n't think to do it ! my dear Carlo ! it is 
only making up your mind to live ; keep up your heart, old 
fellow. — don't go to leave us alone among these villains. 
My poor, dear, darling dog ! no ! he won't live, — he 
can't live ! See how dull his poor, dear eye is getting. 
Carlo, Carlo ! " 

At the sound of his master's voice in such distress, Carlo 
whimpered, and then he began to stretch his limbs out. At 
the sight of this, Robinson cried hastily, — 

"Rub him, George ! We did wrong to send him into the 
water." 

George rubbed him all over. After rubbing him awhile, he 
said, — 

" Tom, I seem to feel him turning to dead under my 
hand." 

George's hand, in rubbing Carlo, came round to the dog's 
shoulder ; then Carlo turned his head, and for the third time 
began to lick George's hand. George let him lick his hand 
and gave up rubbing, for where was the use 1 Carlo never 
left off licking his hand, but feebly, very feebly, — more and 
more feebly. 

Presently, even while he was licking his hand, the poor 
thing's teeth closed slowly on his loving tongue, and then he 
could lick the beloved hand no more. Breath fluttered about 
his body a little while longer ; but in truth he had ceased to 
live when he could no longer kiss his master's hand. 

The poor single-hearted soul was gone. 

George took it up tenderly in his arms. Robinson made 
an effort to console him. 

" Don't speak to me, Tom, if you please," said George, 



THE LARK IN THE GOLD-FIELDS. 37 

gently but quickly. He carried it home silently, and laid it 
silently down in a corner of the tent. 

Robinson made a fire and put some steaks on, and made 
George slice some potatoes, to keep him from looking always 
at what so little while since was Carlo. Then they sat down 
silently and gloomily to dinner j it was long past their usual 
hour, and they were working men. Until we die we dine, 
come what may. The first part of the meal passed in deep 
silence. Then Robinson said sadly, — 

" We will go home, George. I fall into your wishes now. 
Gold can't pay for what we go through in this hellish place." 

" Not it," replied George, quietly. 

" We are surrounded by enemies." 

" Seems so," was the reply, in a very languid tone. 

" Labor by day and danger by night." 

" Ay ! " but in a most indifferent tone. 

" And no Sabbath for us two." 

" No." 

" I '11 do my best for you, and when we have five hundred 
pounds, you shall go home." 

" Thank you. He was a good friend to us that lies there 
under my coat; he used to lie over it, and then who dare 
touch it 1" 

" No ! but don't give way to that, George ; do eat a bit, — 
it will do you good." 

" I will, Tom, — I will. Thank you kindly. Ah ! now I 
see why he came to me and kept licking my hand so the 
moment he got the hurt. He had more sense than we had, 
— he knew he and I were to part that hour ; and I tormented 
his last minutes sending him into the water and after stones, 
when the poor thing wanted to be bidding me good by all the 
while. dear ! dear ! " and George pushed his scarce- 
tasted dinner from him, and left the tent hurriedly, his eyes 
thick with tears. 

Thus ended this human day so happily begun ; and thus 
the poor dog paid the price of fidelity this Sunday afternoon. 

Siste viator iter and part with poor Carlo, for whom there 



38 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

are now no more little passing troubles, no more little simple 
joys. His duty is performed, his race is run ; peace be to 
him, and to all simple and devoted hearts ! Ah me ! how 
rare they are among men ! 



THE FACE AGAINST THE PANE.— T. B. Aldrich. 

MABEL, little Mabel, 
With face against the pane, 
Looks out across the night 
And sees the Beacon Light 

A-trembling in the rain. 
She hears the sea-birds screech, 
And the breakers on the beach 

Making moan, making moan. 
And the wind about the eaves 
Of the cottage sobs and grieves ; 

And the willow-tree is blown 
To and fro, to and fro, 
Till it seems like some old crone 
Standing out there all alone, 

With her woe ! 
Wringing, as she stands, 
Her gaunt and palsied hands, 
While Mabel, timid Mabel, 

With face against the pane, 
Looks out across the night, 
And sees the Beacon Light 

A-trembling in the rain. 

Set the table, maiden Mabel, 

And make the cabin warm ; 
Your little fisher-lover 

Is out there in the storm, 
And your father — you are weeping ! 



llli: FACE AGAINST THE PANE. 39 

O Mabel, timid Mabel, 

Go, spread the supper-table, 
And set the tea a steeping. 
Your lovers heart is brave, 

His boat is staunch and tight ; 
And your father knows the perilous reef 

That makes the water white. 
— But Mabel, Mabel darling, 

With face against the pane, 
Looks out across the night 

At the Beacon in the rain. 

The heavens are veined with fire ! 

And the thunder, how it rolls ! 
In the killings of the storm 

The solemn church-bell tolls 

For lost souls ! 
But no sexton sounds the knell 

In that belfry old and high ; 
Unseen fingers sway the bell 

As the wind goes tearing by ! 
How it tolls for the souls 

Of the sailors on the sea ! 
God pity them, God pity them, 

Wherever they may be ! 
God pity wives and sweethearts 

Who wait and wait in vain ! 
And pity little Mabel, 

With face against the pane. 

A boom ! — the Lighthouse gun ! 

(How its echo rolls and rolls ! ) 
'T is to warn the home-bound ships 

Off the shoals ! 
See ! a rocket cleaves the sky 

From the Fort, — a shaft of light ! 
See ! it fades, and, fading, leaves 



40 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Golden furrows on the night ! 
What made Mabel's cheek so pale 1 

What made Mabel's lips so white 1 
Did she see the helpless sail 

That, tossing here and there, 

Like a -feather in the air, 
Went down and out of sight 1 
Down, down, and out of sight ! 
0, watch no more, no more, 

With face against the pane ; 
You cannot see the men that drown 

By the Beacon in the rain ! 

From a shoal of richest rubies 

Breaks the morning clear and cold. 
And the angel on the village spire, 

Frost-touched, is bright as gold. 
Four ancient fishermen, 

In the pleasant autumn air, 
Come toiling up the sands, 
With something in their hands, — 
Two bodies stark and white, 
Ah, so ghastly in the light, 

With sea-weed in their hair ! 
ancient fishermen, 

Go up to yonder cot ! 
You '11 find a little child, 

With face against the pane, 
Who looks toward the beach, 

And, looking, sees it not. 
She will never watch again ! 

Never watch and weep at sight I 
For those pretty, saintly eyes 
Look beyond the stormy skies, 

And they see the Beacon Light. 



THE LOVER AND BIRDS. 41 



THE LOVER AND BIRDS.— Wm. Allingham. 

WITHIN a budding grove, 
In April's ear sang every bird his best ; 
But not a song to pleasure my unrest, 
Or touch the tears unwept of bitter love. 
Some spake, methought, with pity ; some as if in jest. 
To every word 
Of every bird 
I listened, and replied as it behove. 

Screamed Chaffinch, "Sweet, sweet, sweet! 
0, bring my pretty love to meet me here ! " 
" Chaffinch," quoth I, " be dumb awhile, in fear 
Thy darling prove no better than a cheat ; 
And never come, or fly when wintry days appear." 
Yet from a twig, 
With voice so big, 
The little fowl his utterance did repeat. 

Then I : " The man forlorn 
Hears earth send up a foolish noise aloft." 
" And what '11 he do % what '11 he do % " scoffed 
The Blackbird, standing in an ancient thorn, 
Then spread his sooty wings and flitted to the croft, 
With cackling laugh : 
Whom I, being half 
Enraged, called after, giving back his scorn. 

Worse mocked the Thrush : " Die ! die ! 
0, could he do it 1 could he do it % Nay ! 
Be quick ! be quick ! Here, here, here ! " went his lay. 
"Take heed! take heed!" Then, "Why? why % why? 
why % why ? 
See-ee now ! see-ee now ! " he drawled. " Back ! back ! back ! 
R-r-r-run away ! " 



42 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Thrush, be still ! 
Or, at thy will, 
Seek some less sad interpreter than I ! 

" Air, air ! blue air and white ! 
Whither I flee, whither, whither, whither I flee ! " 
Thus the Lark hurried, mounting from the lea. 
" Hills, countries, many waters glittering bright, 
Whither I see, whither T see ! deeper, deeper, deeper ! whither 
I see, see, see ! " 

" Gay Lark," I said, 
" The song that 's bred 
In happy nest may well to heaven make flight." 

" There 's something, something sad, 
I half remember," piped a broken strain. 
Well sung, sweet Robin ! Robin sung again : 
"Spring's opening cheerily, cheerily ! be we glad ! " 
Which moved, I w^st not why, me melancholy mad, 
Till now, grown meek, 
With wetted cheek, 
Most comforting and gentle thoughts I had. 



THE HIGH TIDE.— Jean Lngelow. 

THE old mayor climbed the belfry tower, 
The ringers ran by two, by three ; 
" Pull, if ye never pulled before, 

Good ringers ; pull your best," quoth he. 
" Play uppe, play uppe, Boston bells ! 
Ply all your changes, all your swells, — 
Play uppe < The Brides of Enderby ! ' " 

I sat and spun within the doore ; 

My thread brake off, I raised myne eyes ; 



THE niGH TrDE. 43 

The level sun, like ruddy ore, 

Lay sinking in the barren skies ; 
And dark against day's golden death 
She moved where Lindis wandereth, — 
My Sonne's faire wife, Elizabeth. 

"Cusha! Cusha! Cusha ! " calling 
Ere the early dews were falling, 
Farre away I heard her song. 
" Cusha ! Cusha ! " all along 
Where the reedy Lindis floweth, 

Floweth, floweth ; 
From the meads where melick groweth, 
Faintly came her milking-song. 

" Cusha ! Cusha ! Cusha ! " calling, 
" For the dews will soone be falling \ 
Leave your meadow grasses mellow, 

Mellow, mellow ; 
Quit your cowslips, cowslips yellow ; 
Come uppe, Whitefoot ; come uppe, Lightfoot ; 
Quit the stalks of parsley hollow, 

Hollow, hollow ; 
Come uppe, Jetty, rise and follow, — 
From the clovers lift your head ; 
Come uppe, Whitefoot ; come uppe, Lightfoot ; 

Come uppe, Jetty, rise and follow, 
Jetty, to the milking shed." 

Alle fresh the level pasture lay, 
And not a shadowe mote be seene, 
Save where, full fyve good miles away, 

The steeple towered from out the greene ; 
And lo ! the great bell farre and wide 
Was heard in all the country-side, 
That Saturday at eventide. 



44 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

I looked without, and lo ! my sonne 

Came riding downe with might and main ; 
He raised a shout as he drew on, 
Till all the welkin rang again, . 
"Elizabeth! Elizabeth!" 
(A sweeter woman ne 'er drew breath 
Than my Sonne's wife, Elizabeth.) 

" The olde sea-wall (he cried) is downe ; 

The rising tide comes on apace, 
And boats adrift in yonder towne 

Go sailing uppe the market-place." 
He shook as one that looks on death : 
" God save you, mother ! " straight he saith j 
" Where is my wife, Elizabeth % " 

" Good sonne, where Lindis winds away, 

With her two bairns I marked her long ; 
And ere yon bells beganne to play, 

Afar I heard her milking-song." 
He looked across the grassy lea, 
To right, to left, — " Ho, Enderby ! " 
They rang " The Brides of Enderby ! " 

With that he cried and beat his breast ; 

For lo ! along the river's bed 
A mighty eygre reared his crest, 

And uppe the Lindis raging sped. 
It swept with thunderous noises loud, — 
Shaped like a curling snow-white cloud, 
Or like a demon in a shroud. 

So farre, so fast the eygre drave, 
The heart had hardly time to beat 

Before a shallow, seething wave 
Sobbed in the grasses at our feet : 

The feet had hardly time to flee 



THE HIGH TIDE. 45 

Before it brake against the knee, 
And all the world was in the sea. 

Upon the roofe we sate that night, 

The noise of bells went sweeping by ; 
I marked the lofty beacon-light 

Stream from the church-tower, red and high, — 
A lurid mark and dread to see ; 
And awesome bells they were to mee, 
That in the dark rang " Enderby." 

They rang the sailor lads to guide 

From roofe to roofe who fearless rowed ; 

And I — my sonne was at my side, 
And yet the ruddy beacon glowed ; 

And yet he moaned beneath his breath, 

" 0, come in life, or come in death ! 

0, lost ! my love, Elizabeth ! " 

And didst thou visit him no more 1 

Thou didst, thou didst, my daughter deare ; 

The waters laid thee at his doore, 
Ere yet the early dawn was clear. 

Thy pretty bairns in fast embrace, 

The lifted sun shone on thy face, 

Downe drifted to thy dwelling-place. 

That flow strewed wrecks about the grass, 
That ebbe swept out the flocks to sea ; 

A fatal ebbe and flow, alas ! 

To many more than myne and me : 

But each will mourn his own (she saith), 

And sweeter woman ne'er drew breath 

Than my Sonne's wife, Elizabeth. 

I shall never hear her more 

By the reedy Lindis shore, 

« Cusha ! Cusha ! Cusha ! " calling, 



46 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Ere the early dews be falling ; 
I shall never hear her song, 
" Cusha ! Cnsha ! " all along 
Where the sunny Lindis floweth, 

Goeth, floweth ; 
From the meads where melick groweth, 
Where the water, winding down, 
Onward floweth to the town. 

I shall never see her more 

Where the reeds and rushes quiver, 

Shiver, quiver; 

Stand beside the sobbing river, 

Sobbing, throbbing, in its falling 

To the sandy, lonesome shore. 

Abridged. 



SANDALPHON, THE ANGEL OF PRAYER. 
H. W. Longfellow. 

HAVE you read in the Talmud of old, 
In the legends the Rabbins have told, 
Of the limitless realms of the air 1 
Have you read it, — the marvellous story 
Of Sandalphon, the Angel of Glory, 
Sandalphon, the Angel of Prayer 1 

How, erect at the outermost gates 
Of the City Celestial he waits, 

With his feet on the ladder of light, 
That, crowded with angels unnumbered, 
By Jacob was seen, as he slumbered, 

Alone in the desert at night 1 

The Angels of Wind and of Fire 
Chant only one hymn, and expire 



SANDALPHON, THE ANGEL OF PRAYER. 47 

With the song's irresistible stress, — 
Expire in their rapture and wonder, 
As harp-strings are broken asunder, 

By the music they throb to express. 

But serene in the rapturous throng, 
Unmoved by the rush of the song, 

With eyes uu impassioned and slow, 
Among the dead angels, the deathless 
Sandalphon stands listening, breathless, 

To sounds that aseend from below, — 

From the spirits on earth that adore, 
From the souls that entreat and implore, 

In the frenzy and passion of prayer, — 
From the hearts that are broken with losses, 
And weary with dragging the crosses 

Too heavy for mortals to bear. 

And he gathers the prayers as he stands, 
And they change into flowers in his hands, 

Into garlands of purple and red ; 
And beneath the great arch of the portal, 
Through the streets of the City Immortal, 

Is wafted the fragrance they shed. 

It is but a legend, I know, — 
A fable, a phantom, a show 

Of the ancient Rabbinical lore ; 
Yet the old mediaeval tradition, 
The beautiful strange superstition, 

But haunts me and holds me the more. 

When I look from my window at night, 
And the welkin above is all white, 

All throbbing and panting with stars ; — 
Among them majestic is standing 



48 TUBL1C AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Sandalphon the angel, expanding 
His pinions in nebulous bars. 

And the legend, I feel, is a part 

Of the hunger and thirst of the heart, 

The frenzy and fire of the brain, 
That grasps at the fruitage forbidden, 
The golden pomegranates of Eden, 

To quiet its fever and pain. 



'BIAH CATHCART'S PROPOSAL. — H. W. Beecher. 

THEY were walking silently and gravely home one Sunday 
afternoon, under the tall elms that lined the street for 
half a mile. Neither had spoken. There had been some little 
parish quarrel, and on that afternoon the text was, " A new 
commandment I write unto you, that ye love one another." 
But after the sermon was done the text was the best part of 
it. Some one said that Parson Marsh's sermons were like the 
meeting-house, — the steeple was the only thing that folks 
could see after they got home. 

They walked slowly, without a word. Once or twice 'Biah 
essayed to speak, but was still silent. He plucked a flower 
from between the pickets of the fence, and unconsciously 
pulled it to pieces, as, with a troubled face, he glanced at 
Rachel, and then, as fearing she would catch his eye, he 
looked at the trees, at the clouds, at the grass, at everything, 
and saw nothing, — nothing but Rachel. The most solemn 
hour of human experience is not that of Death, but* of Life, — 
when the heart is born again, and from a natural heart be- 
comes a heart of Love ! What wonder that it is a silent hour 
and perplexed 1 

Is the soul confused 1 Why not, when the divine Spirit, 
rolling clear across the aerial ocean, breaks upon the heart's 
shore with all the mystery of heaven 1 ? Is it strange that 



•BIAH CATHCABT'S PROPOSAL. 49 

uncertain lights dim the eye, if above the head of him that 
truly loves hover clouds of saintly spirits? Why should not 
the tongue stammer and refuse its accustomed offices, when 

all the world — skies, trees, plains, hills, atmosphere, and the 
solid earth — springs forth in new colors, with strange mean- 
ings, and seems to chant for the soul the glory of that mystic 
Law with which God has hound to himself his infinite realm, 
— the law of Love] Then, for the first time, when one so 
loves that love is sacrifice, death to self, resurrection, and 
glory, is man brought into harmony with the whole universe ; 
and, like him who beheld the seventh heaven, hears things 
unlawful to be uttered. 

The great elm-trees sighed as the fitful breeze swept 
their tops. The soft shadows flitted back and forth beneath 
the walker's feet, fell upon them in light and dark, ran over 
the ground, quivered and shook, until sober Cathcart thought 
that his heart was throwing its shifting network of hope and 
fear along the ground before him ! 

How strangely his voice sounded to him, as, at length, all 
his emotions could only say, " Kachel, — how did you like the 
sermon 1 " 

Quietly she answered, — 

" I liked the text." 

" ' A new commandment I write unto you, that ye love one 
another.' Rachel, will you help me keep it 1 " 

At first she looked down and lost a little color ; then, rais j 
ing her face, she turned upon him her large eyes, with a look 
both clear and tender. It was as if some painful restraint 
had given way, and her eyes blossomed into full beauty. 

Not another word was spoken. They walked home hand 
in hand. He neither smiled nor exulted. He saw neither the 
trees, nor the long level ra} T s of sunlight that were slanting 
across the fields. His soul was overshadowed with a cloud as 
if God were drawing near. He had never felt so solemn. 
This woman's life had been intrusted to him ! 

Long years, — the w T hole length of life, — the eternal years 
beyond, seemed in an indistinct way to rise up in his imagi- 



50 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

nation. All that he could say, as he left her at the door, 
was, — 

" Rachel, this is forever — forever." 
• She again said nothing, but turned to him with a clear and 
open face, in which joy and trust wrought beauty. It seemed 
to him as if a light fell upon him from her eyes. There was 
a look that descended and covered him as with an atmosphere ; 
and all the way home he was as one walking in a luminous 
cloud. He had never felt such personal dignity as now. He 
that wins such love is crowned, and may call himself king. 
He did not feel the earth under his feet. As he drew near his 
lodgings, the sun went down. The children began to pour 
forth, no longer restrained. Abiah turned to hi-s evening 
chores. No animal that night but had reason to bless him. 
The children found him unusually good and tender. And 
Aunt Keziah said to her sister, — 

" Abiah 's been goin' to meetin' very regular for some weeks, 
and I should n't wonder, by the way he looks, if he had got a 
hope. I trust he ain't deceivin' himself." 

He had a hope, and he was not deceived ; for in a few 
months, at the close of the service one Sunday morning, the 
minister read from the pulpit : " Marriage is intended between 
Abiah Cathcart and Rachel Liscomb, both of this town, and 
this is the first publishing of the banns." 



LANGLEY LANK— Robert Buchanan. 

IN all the land, range up, range down, 
Is there ever a place so pleasant and sweet 
As Langley Lane in London town, 

Just out of the bustle of square and street % 
Little white cottages all in a row, 
Gardens where bachelor's-buttons grow, 

Swallows' -nests in roof and wall, 
And up above the still blue sky 



LANGLEY LANE. 51 

Where the woolly white clouds go sailing by, — 
I seem to be able to see it all ! 

For now, in summer, I take my chair, 

And sit outside in the sun, and hear 
The distant murmur of street and square, 

And the swallows and sparrows chirping near ; 
And Fanny, who lives just over the way, 
Comes running many a time each day, 

With her little hand's touch so warm and kind, 
And I smile and talk, with the sun on my cheek, 
And the little live hand seems to stir and speak, — 

For Fanny is dumb and I am blind. 

Fanny is sweet thirteen, and she 

Has fine black ringlets and dark eyes clear, 
And I am older by summers three, — 

Why should we hold one another so dear 1 
Because she cannot utter a word, 
Nor hear the music of bee or bird, 

The water-cart's splash or the milkman's call ! 
Because I have never seen the sky, 
Nor the little singers that hum and fly, 

Yet know she is gazing upon them all ! 

For the sun is shining, the swallows fly, 

The bees and the blue-flies murmur low, 
And I hear the water-cart go .by, 

With its cool splash-splash down the dusty row ; 
And the little one close at my side perceives 
Mine eyes upraised to the cottage eaves, 

Where birds are chirping in summer shine, 
And I hear, though I cannot look, and she, 
Though she cannot hear, can the singers see, — 

And the little soft fingers flutter in mine ! 

Hath not the dear little hand a tongue, 

When it stirs on my palm for the love of me 1 



52 PUBLIC AND FARLOR READINGS. 

Do I not know she is pretty and young 1 

Hath not my soul an eye to see ? 
'T is pleasure to make one's bosom stir, 
To wonder how things appear to her, 

That I only hear as they pass around ; 
And as long as we sit in the music and light, 
She is happy to keep God's sight, 

And / am happy to keep God's sound. 

Why, I know her face, though I am blind, — 

I made it of music long ago, — 
Strange large eyes and dark hair twined 

Round the pensive light of a brow of snow ; 
And when I sit by my little one, 
And hold her hand and talk in the sun, 

And hear the music that haunts the place, 
I know she is raising her eyes to me, 
And guessing how gentle my voice must be, 

And seeing the music upon my face. 

Though, if ever the Lord should grant me a prayer ? 

(I know the fancy is only vain,) 
I should pray just once, when the weather is fair, 

To see little Fanny and Langley Lane ; 
Though Fanny, perhaps, would pray to hear 
The voice of the friend that she holds so dear, 

The song of the birds, the hum of the street. 
It is better to be as we have been, — 
Each keeping up something, unheard, unseen, 

To make God's heaven more strange and sweet ! 

Ah, life is pleasant in Langley Lane ! 

There is always something sweet to hear ! 
Chirping of birds or patter of rain ! 

And Fanny, my little one, always near ! 
And though I am weakly and can't live long, 
And Fanny my darling is far from strong, 



AT THE GRINDSTONE. 53 

And though we can never married be, 
What then, since we hold one another so dear, 
For the sake of the pleasure one cannot hear, 

And the pleasure that only one can see 1 



AT THE GRINDSTONE ; OR, A HOME VIEW OF THE 
BATTLE-FIELD. — Robert Buchanan. 

GRIND, Billie, grind ! And so the war 's begun 1 
Flash, bayonets ! cannons, call ! dash down their prido ! 
If 1 was younger, I would grip a gun, 

And die a-field, as better men have died ; 
I 'd face three Frenchmen, lad, and feel no fear, 
With this old knife that we are grinding here ! 

Why, I 'm a kind of radical, and saw 

Some fighting in the riots long ago ; 
But, Lord, am I the sort of chap to draw 

A sword against old Mother England 1 No ! 
England for me, with all her errors, still, — 
I hate them foreigners and always will ! 

There was our Johnnie, now ! — as kind a lad 

As ever grew in England ; fresh and fair ! 
To see him in his regimentals clad, 

With honest, rosy cheeks and yellow hair, 
Was something, Billy, worthy to be seen ; 
But Johnnie 's gone, — murdered at seventeen. 

None of your fighting sort, but mild and shy, 

Soft-hearted, full of wench-like tenderness, 
Without the heart, indeed, to hurt a fly, 

But fond, you see, of music and of dress ; 
We could not hold him in, dear lad, and so 
He heard the fife, and would a-soldiering go. 



54 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

And it was pleasant for a time to see 

Johnnie, onr little drummer, go and come, 

Holding his head np, proudly, merrily, 

Happy with coat o' red, and hat, and drum. 

That was in peace ; but war broke out one day, 

And Johnnie's regiment was called away. 

He went ! he went ! , he could not choose but go ! 

And me and my old woman wearied here : 
We knew that men must fall and blood must flow, 

But still had many a thought to lighten fear : 
Those Russian men could never be so bad 
As kill or harm so very small a lad, — 

A lad that should have been at school or play ! 

A little baby in a coat o' red ! 
What ! touch our Johnnie ] No, not they ! 

Why, they had little ones themselves, we said. 
Billie, the little lad we loved so well 
Was slain among the very first that fell ! 

Mark that ! A bullet from a murderous gun 
Singled him out, and struck him to the brain; 

He fell, — our boy, our joy, onr little one, — 
His bright hair dark with many a stain, 

His clammy hands clenched tight, his eyes o' brow. 

Looking through smoke and fire to Stamford town. 

What ! call that war ! to slay a helpless child 
Who never, never hurt a living thing! 

Butchered, for what we know, too, while he smiled 
On the strange light all round him, wondering ! 

Grind, Billie, grind ! call, cannons ! bayonets thrust 1 

Would we were grinding all our foes to dust ! 

Bah ! Frenchman, Turk, or Russian, — all alike! 
All eaten up with slaughter, sin, and slavery ! 



THE PILOT. 55 

Little care they what harmless hearts they strike, — 

They murder little lads, and call it bravery ! 
Down with them when they cross our path, 1 say; 
Give me old England's manhood and fair play ! 



THE PILOT.— J. B. Gough. 

JOHN MAYNARD was well known in the lake district as 
a God-fearing, honest, and intelligent man. He was 
pilot on a steamboat from Detroit to Buffalo. One summer 
afternoon — at that time those steamers seldom carried boats 
— smoke was seen ascending from below, and the captain 
called out, " Simpson, go below and see what the matter is 
down there." 

Simpson came up with his face pale as ashes, and said, 
" Captain, the ship is on fire." 

Then " Fire ! fire ! fire ! " on shipboard. 

All hands were called up, buckets of water were dashed 
on the fire, but in vain. There were large quantities of rosin 
and tar on board, and it was found useless to attempt to 
save the ship. The passengers rushed forward and inquired 
of the pilot, " How far are we from Buffalo ] " 

" Seven miles." 

" How long before we can reach there 1 ?" 

" Three quarters of an hour, at our present rate of steam." 

" Is there any danger 1 " 

" Danger ! Here, see the smoke bursting out, — go forward 
if you would save your lives." 

Passengers and crew — men, women, and children — 
crowded the forward part of the ship. John Maynard stood 
at the helm. The flames burst forth in a sheet of fire ; 
clouds of smoke arose. 

The captain cried out through his trumpet, "John May- 
nard ! " 

" Ay, ay, sir ! " 



56 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

11 Are you at the helm 1 " 

" Ay, ay, sir ! " 

" How does she head?" 
■ " Southeast by east, sir." 

" Head her southeast, and run her on shore," said the 
captain. Nearer, nearer, yet nearer, she approached the 
shore. Again the captain cried out, "John Maynard ! " 

The response came feebly this time, "Ay, ay, sir ! " 

" Can you hold on five minutes longer, John 1 " he said. 

"■ By God's help, I will." 

The old man's hair was scorched from the scalp, one hand 
disabled; — his knee upon the stanchion, and his teeth 
set, with his other hand upon the wheel, he stood firm as a 
rock. He beached the ship ; every man, woman, and child 
was saved, as John Maynard dropped, and his spirit took its 
flight to God. 



WAINAMOINEN'S SOWING. — Fkom the Finnish. 

TRANSLATED BY JOHN A. PORTER, M. D. 

ALL the ocean isles and islets 
Had been duly made and fashioned ; 
All the ocean reefs and ledges 
Had been duly wrought and founded ; 
All the shining silver pillars 
Of the firmament uplifted, 
And the hills with crystals sprinkled, 
And the highlands water-channelled ; 
All the prairies had been levelled, 
And the meadows wide unfolded. 

Then at last in lapse of ages, 
By the will of mighty Ukko, 
Ukko, mighty Lord above us, 
To the world was born a minstrel, 



WAINAMOINEN'S SOWING. 57 

Finland's mighty sage and singer, 
Wise and prudent Wainamoinen, 
Of a goddess fair descended, 
Daughter of the air and ocean. 

Full of glory grew the forest, 
Leaf and branch in beauty nourished, 
All the race of trees and grasses, 
All the tribe of reeds and sedges. 
Birds sang sweetly in the tree-tops, 
Making music all the day long ; 
Cheerily chirped the noisy throstle, 
Sweetly sang the low-voiced cuckoo. 

Berries grew upon the mountains, 
Golden flowers adorned the meadows 
Leaf and fruit of every flavor, 
Bush and herb of every fashion ; 
All things fair and lovely flourished, 
All things save the one most precious 
Fruit of fruits, the golden barley. 

Then one morning Wainamoinen. 
Taking from his pouch of leather 
Six small seeds of golden barley, 
Sallied forth the seed to scatter. 
Six small seeds of golden barley, 
He had found upon the sea-shore, 
On the mighty water's edges, 
And with loose and sandy pebbles 
Had concealed them in his skin-pouch, 
In his pouch of squirrel-leather. 

As he sowed he chanted ever, 
"Blessing to the seed I scatter, 
For it falls upon the meadow, 
By the grace of Ukko mighty. 
3* 



58 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Through the open finger-spaces 
Of the hand that all things fashioned, 
Falls to rise again in beauty, 
Evermore to spring and nourish. 

" Rise, Earth ! from out thy slumbers, 
Bid the soil unlock her treasures, 
Bid the blade arise in beauty, 
Bid the stalk grow strong and stately ; 
On a thousand stems uplifted 
Let the yellow harvest ripen, 
Let it cover all my cornfields 
Hundred-fold for seed I planted. 

11 Ukko mighty ! God above us, 
Gracious Ukko ! Father in Heaven, 
Thou who all the sky commandest, 
For the fleecy clouds appointing 
Every morn their course and pathway, 
In thine airy realm consulting, 
In thy kingdom taking counsel, 
Send us clouds from east and northeast, 
From the south and from the sunset ; 
Let them scatter drops refreshing ; 
Bid them all their sweetness sprinkle, 
That the ear may lift its treasure 
And the corn make haste to ripen." 

Gracious Ukko, Father in Heaven, 
Heard the prayer the minstrel lifted, 
From the south a cloud commanded, 
From the west despatched its fellow, 
Bid one gather in the northwest, 
And from .out the east another ; 
Closing then their swarthy borders, 
Crowding all in haste together, 
Bade them all their sweetness sprinkle, 



WAINAMOINEN'S SOWING. 59 

Scatter wide their drops refreshing, 
That the ear might rise in beauty 
And the corn make haste to ripen. 
Soon from out the earth and darkness, 
Lo, the tender blade uplifted, 
And anon the ears unfolded, 
Through the care of Wainamoinen. 

Summer days had sped and vanished, 
Days and nights a goodly number, 
When the ancient Wainamoinen 
Sought the field to see, if might be, 
How his ploughing and his sowing 
And his praying had been prospered. 
Verily the corn had thriven 
Wholly to the bard's contentment ; 
Lo, the ears, in six rows seeded, 
Waved o'er all the callow cornfield, 
And the straw, in three joints builded, 
Covered all the teeming acres. 

Glancing then a moment round him, 
Near him, lo ! a little cuckoo. 
And the birdling sang unto him, 
Long the birch-tree first surveying : 

" Why, when all the wood has fallen, 
Standeth there the slender birch-tree % " 

Spake in answer Wainamoinen : 
11 Therefore is the birch left standing, 
That its summit, soaring skyward, 
Make for thee, my pretty birdling, 
Station for thy cheerful singing. 
Warble here, my pretty birdling, 
Silken throat and breast attuning, 
Warble forth thy sweetest carol 
Dulcet as a bell of silver. 



60 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

" Sing at morn and sing at evening, 
Sing when sunny noon is highest, 
Blessing to these chosen places, 
Growth and greenness to our forests, 
Wealth along our ocean borders 
For our garner's rich abundance." 



THE WITCH'S DAUGHTER. — J. G.Whittier. 

IT was the pleasant harvest-time, 
When cellar-bins are closely stowed, 
And garrets bend beneath their load, 
And the old swallow-haunted barns — 
Brown-gabled, long, and full of seams 
Through which the moted sunlight streams — 
Are filled with summer's ripened stores, 
Its odorous grass and barley sheaves, 
From their low scaffolds to their eaves. 

On Esek Harden's oaken floor, 

With many an autumn threshing worn, 
Lay the heaped ears of unhusked corn. 

And thither came young men and maids, 
Beneath a moon that, large and low, 
Lit that sweet eve of long ago. 

They took their places ; some by chance, 
And others by a merry voice 
Or sweet smile guided to their choice. 

How pleasantly the rising moon, 

Between the shadow of the mows, 

Looked on them through the great elm-boughs ! 
On sturdy boyhood, sun-embrowned, 

On girlhood with its solid curves 

Of healthful strength and painless nerves J! 



THE WITCH'S DAUGHTER. 61 

And jests went round, and laughs that made 
The house-dog answer with his howl, 
And kept astir the barn-yard fowl. 

But still the sweetest voice was mute 

That river-valley ever heard 

From lip of maid or throat of bird ; 
For Mabel Martin sat apart, 

And let the hay-mow's shadow fall 

Upon the loveliest face of all. 
She sat apart, as one forbid, 

Who knew that none would condescend 

To own the Witch-wife's child a friend. 

The seasons scarce had gone their round, 

Since curious thousands thronged to see 

Her mother on the gallows-tree. 
Few questioned of the sorrowing child, 

Or, when they saw the mother die, 

Dreamed of the daughter's agony. 

Poor Mabel from her mother's grave 
Crept to her desolate hearth-stone, 
And wrestled with her fate alone. 

Sore tried and pained, the poor girl kept 
Her faith, and trusted that her way, 
So dark, would somewhere meet the day. 

And still her weary wheel went round, 
Day after day, with no relief : 
Small leisure have the poor for grief. 

So in the shadow Mabel sits ; 

Untouched by mirth she sees and hears, 

Her smile is sadder than her tears. 
But cruel eyes have found her out, 

And cruel lips repeat her name, 

And taunt her with her mother's shame. 



62 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

She answered not with railing words, 
But drew her apron o'er her face, 
And, sobbing, glided from the place. 

And only pausing at the door, 

Her sad eyes met the troubled gaze 
Of one who, in her better days, 

Had been her warm and steady friend, 
Ere yet her mother's doom had made 
Even Esek Harden half afraid. 

He felt that mute appeal of tears, 
And, starting, with an angry frown 
Hushed all the wicked murmurs down. 

" Good neighbors mine," he sternly said, 
" This passes harmless mirth or jest ; 
I brook no insult to my guest. 

" She is indeed her mother's child ; 
But God's sweet pity ministers 
Unto no whiter soul than hers. 

Let Goody Martin rest in peace ; 
I never knew her harm a fly, 
And witch or not, God knows, — not I. 

I know who swore her life away ; 
And, as God lives, I 'd not condemn 
An Indian dog on word of them." 

The broadest lands in all the town, 
The skill to guide, the power to awe, 
Were Harden's ; and his word was law. 

None dared withstand him to his face, 
But one sly maiden spake aside : 
" The little witch is evil-eyed ! 

Her mother only killed a cow, 
Or witched a churn or dairy-pan ; 
But she, forsooth, must charm a man ! ' ! 



THE WITCH'S DAUGHTER. 63 

Poor Mabel, in her lonely home, 

Sat by the window's narrow pane, 

White in the moonlight's silver rain. 
She strove to drown her sense of wrong, 

And, in her old and simple way, 

To teach her bitter heart to pray. 

Poor child ! the prayer, begun in faith, 

Grew to a low, despairing cry 
Of utter misery : " Let me die ! 
Oh ! take me from the scornful eyes, 

And hide me where the cruel speech 

And mocking finger may not reach ! 

11 1 dare not breathe my mother's name : 

A daughter's right I dare not crave 

To weep above her unblest grave ! 
Let me not live until my heart, 

With few to pity, and with none 

To love me, hardens into stone. 
God ! have mercy on thy child, 

Whose faith in thee grows weak and small, 

And take me ere I lose it alL" 

A shadow on the moonlight fell, 

And murmuring wind and wave became 

A voice whose burden was her name. 
Had then God heard her 1 Had he sent 

His angel down 1 In flesh and blood, 

Before her Esek Harden stood ! 

He laid his hand upon her arm : 

" Dear Mabel, this no more shall be ; 

Who scoffs at you, must scoff at me. 
You know rough Esek Harden well ; 

And if he seems no suitor gay, 

And if his hair is mixed with gray, 



64 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

The maiden grown shall never find 

His heart less warm than when she smiled 
Upon his knees, a little child ! " 

Her tears of grief were tears of joy, 
As folded in his strong embrace, 
She looked in Esek Harden's face. 

" truest friend of all ! " she said, 

" God bless you for your kindly thought, 
And make me worthy of my lot ! " 

He led her through his dewy fields, 

To where the swinging lanterns glowed, 
And through the doors the huskers showed. 

" Good friends and neighbors ! " Esek said, 
" I 'm weary of this lonely life ; 
In Mabel see my chosen wife ! 

" She greets you kindly, one and all ; 
The past is past, and all offence 
Falls harmless from her innocence. 

Henceforth she stands no more alone j 
You know what Esek Harden is ; — 
He brooks no wrong to him or his." 

Now let the merriest tales be told, 
And let the sweetest songs be sung, 
That ever made the old heart young ! 

For now the lost has found a home ; 
And a lone hearth shall brighter burn, 
As all the household joys return ! 

0, pleasantly the harvest moon, 
Between the shadow of the mows, 
Looked on them through the great elm-boughs J 

On Mabel's curls of golden hair, 
On Esek's shaggy strength, it fell ; 
And the wind whispered, " It is well ! " 

Abridged. 



THE HORSEBACK RIDE. 65 



THE HORSEBACK RIDE. — Grace Greenwood. 

WHEN troubled in spirit, when weary of life, 
When I faint 'neath its burdens, and shrink from its 
strife ; 
When its fruits, turned to ashes, are mocking my taste, 
And its fairest scenes seem but a desolate waste, 
Then come ye not near me, my sad heart to cheer, 
With friendship's soft accents, or sympathy's tear, — 
No pity I ask, and no counsel I need. 
But bring me, bring me, my gallant young steed, 
With his high-arched neck, and his nostrils spread wide, 
His eyes full of fire, and his step full of pride ! 
As I spring to his back, as I seize the strong rein, 
The strength of my spirit returneth again ! 
The bonds are all broken that fettered my mind, 
And my cares borne away on the wings of the wind ; 
My pride lifts its head, for a moment bowed down, 
And the queen in my nature now puts on her crown ! 

Now we're off, like the winds to the plains whence they came, 

And the rapture of motion is thrilling my frame ! 

On, on speeds my courser, scarce printing the sod, 

Scarce crushing a daisy to mark where he trod ! 

On, on like a deer, when the hound's early bay 

Awakes the wild echoes, away and away ! 

Still faster, still farther, he leaps at my cheer, 

Till the rush of the startled air whirs in my ear ! 

Now 'long a clear rivulet lieth his track, — 

See his glancing hoofs tossing the white pebbles back ! 

Now a glen, dark as midnight, — what matter % — we '11 down, 

Though shadows are round us, and rocks o'er us frown ! 

The thick branches shake as we 're hurrying through, 

And deck us with spangles of silvery dew ! 

What a wild thought of triumph, that this girlish hand 
Such a steed in the might of his strength may command J 



66 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

What a glorious creature ! Ah ! glance at him now, 

As I check him awhile on this green hillock's brow ! 

How he tosses his mane, with a shrill, joyous neigh, 

And paws the firm earth in his proud, stately play ! 

Hurrah ! off again, dashing on as in ire, 

Till the long, flinty pathway is flashing with fire ! 

Ho ! a ditch ! — Shall we pause 1 No ; the bold leap we dare, 

Like a swift-winged arrow we rush through the air ! 

0, not all the pleasures that poets may praise, 

Not the wildering waltz in the ball-room's blaze, 

Nor the chivalrous joust, nor the daring race, 

Nor the swift regatta, nor merry chase, 

Nor the sail high heaving the waters o'er, 

Nor the rural dance on the moonlight shore, 

Can the wild and thrilling joy exceed 

Of a fearless leap on a fiery steed. 



THE VEILED PICTURE. 

TWO artist lovers sought the hand of a noted painter's 
daughter. The question which of the two should possess 
himself of the prize so earnestly coveted by both having 
come, finally, to the father, he promised to give his child to 
the one that could paint best. So each strove for the maiden 
with the highest skill his genius could command. 

One painted a picture of fruit, and displayed it to the 
father's inspection in a beautiful grove, where gay birds sang 
sweetly among the foliage, and all nature rejoiced in the 
luxuriance of bountiful life. Presently the birds came down 
to the canvas of the young painter, and attempted to eat the 
fruit he had pictured there. In his surprise and joy at the 
young artist's skill, the father declared that no one could 
triumph over that. 

Soon, however, the second lover came with his picture, 
and it was veiled. " Take the veil from your painting," said 



THE SHIP ON FIRE. 67 

the old man. " I leave that to you," said the young artist, 
with simple modesty. The father of the young and lovely 
maiden then approached the veiled picture and attempted to 
uncover it. But imagine his astonishment when, as he at- 
tempted to take off the veil, he found the veil itself to be a 
picture ! We need not say who was the lucky lover \ for, if 
the artist who deceived the birds by skill in fruit manifested 
great powers of art, he who could so veil his canvas with the 
pencil as to deceive a skilful master was surely the greater 
artist. 



THE SHIP ON FIRE. — Henry Bateman. 

MORNING ! all speedeth well ; the bright sun 
Lights up the deep blue wave, and favoring breeze 
Fills the white sails, while o'er that Southern sea 
The ship, with all the busy life within, 
Holds on her ocean course, alone, but glad ! 
For all is yet, as all has been the while 
Since the white cliffs were left, without or fear 
Or danger to those hundreds grouping now 
Upon the sunny deck. 

Fire ! — Fire ! — Fire ! — Fire ! 



Scorching smoke in many a wreath, 

Sulphurous blast of heated air, 
Grim presentment of quick death, 

Crouching fear and stern despair, 
Hist, to what the Master saith, — 

" Steady, steersman, steady there ! " — Ay ! ay ! 

To the deck the women led, 

Children helped by stalwart men, 
Calmly, firmly mustered 

All the crew assemble then, 



68 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

And to orders briefly said, 

Comes the sharp response again, — Ay ! ay ! 

" To the mast-head ! " — it is done, — 

" Look to leeward," — scores obey, — 
11 And to windward," — many a one 

Turns, and never turns away ; 
Steadfast is the word and tone, 

" Man the boats, and clear away ! " — Ay ! ay ! 

Hotter ! hotter ! — heave and strain ; — 

In the hollow, on the wave, — 
Pump ! and flood the deck again, — 

Work ! no danger daunts the brave, — 
Hope and trust are not in vain, 

God looks on, and he can save. — Ay ! ay ! 

Desolate ! all desolate ! 

Nothing, nothing to be seen, — 
Wait and watch, and hope and wait, 

Hope has never hopeless been, — • 
" Men, ye know that God is great, 

Would he — he can intervene. " — Ay ! ay ! 

" What above 1 [ n — nor sail, nor sound, — 
" Leeward 1 " — nothing, far or near, — ■ 

" What to windward % " — to the bound 
Of the horizon all is clear ; — 

Yet again the words go round, 

"Work, men, work; we dare not fear ! " — Ay ! ay ! 

From a heavy lurch abeam, 

Struggling, shivering, reeling back, — 

Crash ! — with rush and shout and scream 
Comes the foreyard, with its wrack 

Crushing hope as it might seem, — 

" Steady ! — keep the sun-line track ! " — Ay ! ay ! 



THE SHIP ON FIRE. ( J 

All is order ! — ready all ! — 

Watching in appointed place 
Underneath the smoky pall, 

Firm of foot, with tranquil face, 
Resolute, whatever befall, 

Holds the Captain's measured pace. — Ay ! ay I 

Hotter ! hotter ! hotter still ! 

Backward driven every one ; 
All in vain the various skill, 

All that man may do is done ; 
" Brave hearts ! strive yet with a will, 

Never deem that hope is gone ! " — Ay ! ay ! 

Hist ! — as if a sudden thought 

Dare not utter what it knew, — 
Falls a trembling whisper, fraught 

As of hope, to frightened few ; 
With a doubting heart-ache caught, 

And a choking "Is it true 1 " — Ay ! ay ! 

Then it comes, — "A sail ! a sail ! " — 

Up from prostrate misery, 
Up from heart-break woe and wail, 

Up to shuddering ecstasy ; — 
' Can so strange a promise fail 1 " 

" Call the Master, let him see \" — Ay ! ay 1 

Silence ! Silence ! Silence ! — Pray ! 



Every moment is an hour, 

Minutes long as weary years, 
While with concentrated power, 

Through the haze that clear eye peers, — 
« No," — " Yes," — " No," —the strong men cower, 

Till he sighs, — faith conquering fears, — " Ay 1 ay ! 



70 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Riseth now the throbbing cry, 

Born of hope and hopelessness ; 
Iron men weep bitterly, 

Unused hands and cheeks caress, — 
Feeling's wild variety ; — 

Strange and heartless were it less. — Ay ! ay ! 

Through the sunlight's glittering gleam 

On old Ocean's rugged breast, 
As a fantasy in dream, 

Yet beyond all doubt confest, 
Comes the ship, — God's gift, they deem, 

Ah, " He overrule th best ! " — Ay ! ay ! 

Coming ! — Come ! — that foremost man 

Shouts as only true heart may, 
" Ship on fire ! " — " You will %» — " You can % " — 

" Near us, for the rescue, stay ! " 
Almost as the words began, 

Answering words are on their way, — " Ay ! ay ! " 

" Ay ! ay ! " — words of little worth 

But as imaging the soul ; — 
See, the boats are struggling forth, — 

Marvel ! how they pitch and roll 
On the dark wave, through the froth, — 

God can bring them safe and whole. — Ay! ay ! . 

Have a care, men ! have a care ! 

Steady, — steady, to the stern, — 
t Now, my brave hearts, handy there, — 

See, the deck begins to burn ! 
Child and woman, soft and fair, 

Go, — thank God, — be quick, — return. — Ay ! ay 

Blistering smoke all dim and red, 
Writhing flakes of lurid flame, — 



THE SHIP ON FIRE. 

Decks that scorch the hasty tread, — 

Shuddering sounds, as if they came 
Wailing from a tortured bed, — 

11 Boatswain, call each man by name ! " — Ay ! ay ! 

Strong, sad now, one by one, 

At the voice which all obey, 
Silently, till all are gone, 

Fill the boats, and pass away, 
And the Captain stands alone ; — 

Has he not done well the day 1 — Ay ! ay ! 

that boat-load ! — anxious eyes, 

Hearts, where painful throbbings swell, 

Watch and wait, with sympathies 
Far too deep for tongue to tell ; 

All suppressed are words and cries, — 
Surely it will all go well ! — Ay ! ay ! 

All is well ! that man so true 

Stands upon the stranger's deck, 
And a thrilling pulse runs through 

Those glad hearts, which none may check, — - 
Listen to the wild halloo ! 

Rainbow joy, in fortune's wreck : — Ay ! ay I 

Pah ! — a rush of smothered light 

Bursts the staggering ship asunder, — 

Lightning flashes, fierce and bright, — 
Blasting sounds, as if of thunder, — ■ 

Dread destruction wins the fight 

Round about, above, and under. — Ay ! ay I 

Come away ! we may not stay ; 

All is done that man can do ; 
Let us take our onward way, 

Life has claims and duties new ; 



72 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

God is a strong help and stay, 

He can guide all sorrow through ! — Ay ! ay I 

Thanks unceasing ! thanks and praise ! 

For his great deliverance shown, 
Lfi-: the remnant of our days 

Testify what he has done ; 
Marvellous his loving ways ! 

Merciful, as we have known ! — Ay ! ay ! 

And so the good ship Merchantman sailed on, 
With double freight of life, and God's kind care, 
Till at the Cape, the rescued voyagers left 
To other kindness of the dwellers there, 
She spread her sails again, and went her way. 



SONG OF THE RIVER. 

CLEAR and cool, clear and cool, 
By laughing shadow and dreaming pool ; 
Cool and clear, cool and clear, 

By shining shingle and foaming weir; 
Under the crag where the ouzel sings, 
And the ivied wall where the church-bell rings ; ■ 

Undefiled for the undefiled, 
Play by me, bathe in me, mother and child. 

Dank and foul, dank and foul, 

By the smoke-grimed town in its murky cowl ; 
Foul and dank, foul and dank, 

By wharf, and sewer, and slimy bank ; 
Darker and darker the farther 1 go, 
Baser and baser the richer I grow ; — 

Who dare sport with the sin-defiled % 
Shrink from me, turn from me, mother and child. 



THE FATE OF MACGREGOR. 73 

Strong and free, strong and free, 

The flood-gates are open ; away to the sea ! 

Free and strong, free and strong, 

Cleansing my stream as I hurry along, 

To the golden sands and the leaping bar, 

And the taintless tide that awaits me afar, 

As I lose myself in the infinite main, 

Like a soul that has sinned and is pardoned again. 
Undefiled for the undefiled, 

Play by me, bathe in me, mother and child. 



THE FATE OF MACGREGOR. — James Hogg. 

""\ /TACGREGOR, Macgregor, remember our foeman ; 

_1_VJL The moon rises broad from the brow of Ben-Lomond ; 
The clans are impatient, and chide thy delay ; 
Arise ! let us bound to Glen-Lyon away." 

Stern scowled the Macgregor ; then, silent and sullen, 
He turned his red eye to the braes of Strathfillan : 

"Go, Malcolm, to sleep, let the clans be dismissed ; 
The Campbells this night for Macgregor must rest." 

" Macgregor, Macgregor, our scouts have been flying 
Three days round the hills of M'Nab and Glen-Lyon ; 
Of riding and running such tidings they bear, 
We must meet them at home, else they '11 quickly be here." 

" The Campbell may come, as his promises bind him, 
And haughty M'Nab, with his giants behind him ; 
This night I am bound to relinquish the fray, 
And do what it freezes my vitals to say. 

" Forgive me, dear brother, this horror of mind ; 
Thou knowest in the strife I was never behind, 
Nor ever receded a foot from the van, 
Or blenched at the ire or the prowess of man ; 



74 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

But I 've sworn, by the cross, by my God, and my all ! 
An oath which I cannot, and dare not recall, — 
Ere the shadows of midnight fall east from the pile, 
To meet with a spirit this night in Glen-Gyle. 

" Last night, in my chamber, all thoughtful and lone, 
I called to remembrance some deeds I had done, 
When entered a lady, with visage so wan, 
And looks such as never were fastened on man. 
I knew her, brother ! I knew her too well ! 
Of that once fair dame such a tale I could tell 
As would thrill thy bold heart ; but how long she remained, 
So racked was my spirit, my bosom so pained, 
I knew not, — but ages seemed short to the while, 
Though, proffer the Highlands, nay, all the green isle, 
With length of existence no man can enjoy, 
The same to endure, the dread proffer I 'd fly ! 
The thrice-threatened pangs of last night to forego, 
Macgregor would dive to the mansions below. 
Despairing and mad, to futurity blind, 
The present to shim, and some respite to find, 
I swore, ere the shadow fell east from the pile, 
To meet her alone by the brook of Glen-Gyle. 

" She told me, and turned my chilled heart to a stone, 
The glory and name of Macgregor were gone : 
That the pine which for ages had shed a bright halo . 
Afar on the mountains of Highland Glen-Falo, 
Should wither and fall ere the turn of yon moon 
Smit through by the canker of hated Colquhoun ; 
That a feast on Macgregors each day should be common, 
For years, to the eagles of Lennox and Lomond. 

" A parting embrace in one moment she gave ; 
Her breath was a furnace, her bosom the grave. ! 
Then flitting illusive, she said, with a frown, 

4 The mighty Macgregor shall yet be my own J ' " 



THE FATE OF MACGKEGOR. 75 

" Macgregor, thy fancies are wild as the wind ; 
The dreams of the night tave disordered thy mind, 
Come, buckle thy panoply, — march to the field, — 
See, brother, how hacked are thy helmet and shield ! 
Ay, that was M'Nab, in the height of his pride, 
When the lions of Dochart stood firm by his side. 
This night the proud chief his presumption shall rue ; 
Rise, brother, these chinks in his heart-blood will glue ; 
Thy fantasies frightful shall flit on the wing, 
When loud with thy bugle Glen-Lyon shall ring." 

Like glimpse of the moon through the storm of the night, 

Macgregor's red eye shed one sparkle of light ; 

It faded, — it darkened, — he shuddered, — he sighed, — 

" No ! not for the universe ! " low he replied. 

Away went Macgregor, but went not alone : 
To watch the dread rendezvous, Malcolm has gone. 
They oared the broad Lomond, so still and serene, 
And deep in her bosom, how awful the scene ! 
O'er mountains inverted the blue waters curled, 
And rocked them on skies of a far nether world. 

All silent they went, for the time was approaching ; 

The moon the blue zenith already was touching \ 

No foot was abroad on the forest or hill, 

No sound but the lullaby sung by the rill : 

Young Malcolm, at distance crouched, trembling the while, — 

Macgregor stood lone by the brook of Glen-Gyle. 

Few minutes had passed, ere they spied on the stream 
A skiff sailing light, where a lady did seem ; 
Her sail was the web of the gossamer's loom ; 
The glow-worm her wake-light, the rainbow her boom ; 
A dim rayless beam was her prow and her mast, 
Like wold-fire at midnight, that glares on the waste. 
Though rough was the river with rock and cascade, 
No torrent, no rock, her velocity stayed ; 



76 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

She wimpled the water to weather and lee, 

And heaved as if borne on the waves of the sea. 

Mute Nature was roused in the bounds of the glen ; 

The wild deer of Gairtney abandoned his den, 

Fled panting away, over river and isle, 

Nor once turned his eye to the brook of Glen-Gyle. 

The fox fled in terror ; the eagle awoke 
As slumbering he dozed on the shelve of the rock ; 
Astonished, to hide in the moonbeam he flew, 
And screwed the night-heaven till lost in the blue. 

Young Malcolm beheld the pale lady approach, 
The chieftain salute her, and shrink from her touch. 
He saw the Macgregor kneel down on the plain, 
As begging for something he could not obtain ; 
She raised him indignant, derided his stay, 
Then bore him on board, set her sail and away. 

Though fast the red bark down the river did glide, 
Yet faster ran Malcolm adown by its side ; 
" Macgregor ! Macgregor ! " he bitterly cried ; 
" Macgregor ! Macgregor ! " the echoes replied. 
He struck at the lady, but, strange though it seem, 
His sword only fell on the rocks and the stream ; 
But the groans from the boat, that ascended amain, 
Were groans from a bosom in horror and pain. 
They reached the dark lake, and bore lightly away, - 
Macgregor is vanished forever and aye ! 



SCENE IN AN IRISH SCHOOL. — Gerald Griffin. 

THE school-house at Glendalough was situated near the 
romantic river which flows between the wild scenery of 
Drumgoff and the Seven Church. It was a low stone build- 
ing, indifferently thatched ; the whole interior consisting 
of one oblong room, floored with clay, and lighted by two or 



SCENE IN AN IRISH SCHOOL. 77 

three windows, the panes of which were patched with old 
copy-books, or altogether supplanted by school slates. The 
walls had once been plastered and whitewashed, but now 
partook of that appearance of dilapidation which character- 
ized the whole building. Along each wall was placed a row 
of large stones, — the one intended for the boys, the other for 
the girls ; the decorum of Mr. Lenigan's establishment requir- 
ing that they should be kept apart on ordinary occasions, for 
Mr. Lenigan, it should be understood, had not been furnished 
with any Pestalozzian light. The only chair in the whole 
establishment was that which was usually occupied by Mr. 
Lenigan himself; and a table appeared to be a luxury of 
which they were either ignorant or wholly regardless. 

One morning Mr. Lenigan was rather later than his usual 
hour in taking possession of the chair above alluded to. 
The sun was mounting swiftly up the heavens. The row 
of stones before described were already occupied, and the 
babble of a hundred voices like the sound of a beehive filled 
the house. Now and then a school-boy in frieze coat and 
corduroy trousers, with an ink-bottle dangling at his breast, 
copy-book, slate, Voster, and reading-book under one arm, 
and a turf under the other, dropped in and took his place on 
the next unoccupied stone. A great boy, with a huge slate in 
his arms, stood in the centre of the apartment, making a list 
of all those who were guilty of any indecorum in the absence 
of the ' Masther.' Near the door was a blazing turf fire, 
which the sharp autumnal winds already rendered agreeable. 
In a corner behind the door lay a heap of fuel formed by the 
contributions of all the scholars ; each being obliged to bring 
one sod of turf every day, and each having the privilege of 
sitting by the fire while his own sod was burning. Those who 
failed to pay their tribute of fuel sat cold and shivering the 
whole day long at the farther end of the room, huddling to- 
gether their bare and frost-bitten toes, and casting a longing, 
envious eye toward the peristyle of well-marbled shins that 
surrounded the fire. 

Full in the influence of the cherishing flame was placed the 



78 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

hay-bottoined chair that supported the person of Mr. Henry 
Lenigan, when that great man presided in person in his rural 
academy. On his right lay a close bush of hazel of astound- 
ing size, the emblem of his authority and the implement of 
castigation. Near this was a wooden sthroker, that is to say, 
a large rule of smooth and polished deal, used for sthroking 
lines in the copy-book, and also for sthroking the palms of 
refractory pupils. On the other side lay a lofty heap of copy- 
books, which were left by the boys and girls for the purpose 
of having their copies ' sot ' by the ' Masther ! ' 

About noon a sudden hush was produced by the appearance 
at the open door of a young man, dressed in rusty black, and 
with something clerical in his costume and demeanor. This 
was Mr. Lenigan's classical assistant ; for to himself the vol- 
umes of ancient literature were a fountain sealed. Five or six 
stout young men, all of whom were intended for learned pro- 
fessions, were the only portion of Mr. Lenigan's scholars that 
aspired to those lofty sources of information. At the sound 
of the word " Virgil ! " from the lips of the assistant the 
whole class started from their seats, and crowded around him, 
each brandishing a smoky volume of the great Augustan 
poet, who, could he have looked into this Irish academy from 
that part of the infernal regions in which he had been placed 
by his pupil Dante, might have been tempted to exclaim, in 
the pathetic words of his hero : — 

" Sunt hie etiara sua pr<emia laudi, 
Sunt lachryma rerum et mentem niortalia tangunt." 

" Who 's head ? " was the first question proposed by the 
assistant, after he had thrown open the volume at that part 
marked as the day's lesson. 
" Jim Naughtin, sir." 

" Well, Naughtin, begin. Consther,* consther now, an' be 
quick ! 

"At puer Ascanius mediis in vallibus acri 
Gaudet equo ; jamque hos cursu, jam praeterit illos : 
Spumantemque dari — " 

* Consther, — translate. 



SCENE IN AN IRISH SCHOOL. 79 

" Go on, sir. Why don't you consther 1 " 

" At puer Ascanius" the person so addressed began, "but 
the boy Ascanius ; medlis in vallibus, in the middle of the 
valley ; gaudet, rejoices." 

" Exults, aragal, exults is a better word." 

" Gaudet, exults ; acri equo, upon his bitther horse." 

" 0, murther alive ! his bitther horse, inagh 1 Erra, what 
would make a horse be bitther, Jim 1 Sure, 't is not of sour 
beer he 's talking ! Rejoicin' upon a bitther horse ! Dear 
knows what a show he was, what raison he had for it ! Acri 
equo, upon his mettlesome steed ; that 's the construction." 

Jim proceeded : — 

Acri equo, upon his mettlesome steed ; jamque, and now ; 
prceterit, he goes beyond — " 

" Outstrips, achree ! " 

" Prceterit, he outstrips ; kos, these ; jamque illos, and now 
those ; cursu, in his course ; que, and ; optat, he longs — " 

" Very good, Jim ; ' longs ' is a very good word there ; I 
thought you were going to say ' wishes.' Did anybody tell 
you that 1 " 

" Dickens a one, sir ! " 

" That 's a good boy. Well 1 " 

" Optat, he longs ; spumantem aprum, that a foaming boar ; 
dari, shall be given ; votis, to his desires ; aut fulvum leonum, 
or that a tawny lion — " 

" That 's a good word again. ' Tawny ' 's a good word ;T)et- 
ther than ' yellow.' " 

11 Descender e, shall descend; monte, from the mountain." 

" Now, boys, observe the beauty of the poet. There 's 
great nature in the picture of the boy Ascanius. Just the 
same way as we see young Misther Keiley of the Grove, at 
the fox-chase the other day, leadin' the whole of 'em right 
and left, jamque kos, jamque illos, an' now Misther Cleary, an' 
now Captain Davis, he outsthripped in his course. A beau-' 
tiful picture, boys, there is in them four lines, of a fine high- 
blooded youth. Yes, people are always the same ; times 
an' manners change, but the heart o' man is the same now as 



80 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

it was in the days of Augustus. But consther your task, 
Jim, an' then I '11 give you an' the boys a little commentary 
upon its beauties." 

The boy obeyed, and read as far as proetexit nomine culpam, 
after which the assistant proceeded to pronounce his little 
commentary : — 

"Now, boys, for what I told ye. Them seventeen lines 
that Jim Naughtin consthered this minute contains as much 
as fifty in a modern book. I pointed out to ye before the 
picture of Ascanius, an' I '11 back it again the world for na- 
ture. Then there 's the incipient storm, — 

' Interea magno inisceri nmrmure ccelum 
Incipit.' 

Erra ! don't be talkin', but listen to that ! There 's a rum- 
bling in the language like the sound of comin' thundher, — 

' . . . . insequitur commixta grandine nimbus.' 

D' ye hear the change 1 D' ye hear all the s's 1 D' ye hear 'em 
whistlin' 1 D' ye hear the black squall comin' up the hill- 
side, brushin' up the dust and dry leaves off the road, and 
hissin' through the threes and bushes 1 An' d' ye hear the 
hail dhriven afther, an' spattherin' the laves, and whitenin' the 
face o' the counthry 1 Commixta grandine nimbus 1 That I 
might n't sin, but when I read them words, I gather my head 
down between my shouldhers, as if it was hailin' atop o' me. 
An' then the sighth of all the huntin' party ! Dido, an' the 
Throjans, an' all the great court ladies and the Tyrian com- 
panions scatthered like cracked people about the place, look- 
in' for sh either, and peltin' about right and left, hether and 
thether in all directions for the bare life, an' the floods swell- 
in' an' coming, an' thundherin' down in rivers from the moun- 
tains, an' all in three lines : — 

' Et Tyrii comites passim, et Trojana juventus 
Dardaniusque nepos Veneris, diversa per agros 
Tecta metu petiere : ruunt de montibus amnes.' 



SCENE IN AN IRISH SCHOOL. 81 

An' see the beauty of the poet, followin' up the character of 
Ascanius ; he makes him the last to quit the field. First the 
Tyrian comrades, an effeminate race, that ran at the eighth 
of a shower, as if they were made o' salt, that they 'd melt 
under it ; and then the Throjan youth, lads that were used 
to it in the first book ; and last of all the spirited boy Asca- 
nius himself. (Silence near the doore 1 ) 

' Speluncam Dido, dux et Trojanus eandem, 
Deveniunt.' 

Observe, boys, he no longer, as of old, calls him the pius 
iEneas, only Dux Trojanus, the Throjan laidher, an 't is he 
that was the laidher and the lad ; see the taste of the poet 
not to call him the pious ^Eneas now, nor even mention his 
name, as if he were half ashamed of him, knowin' well what 
a lad he had to dale with. There 's where Virgil took the 
crust out o' Homer's mouth in the nateness of his language, 
that you 'd gather a part o' the feelin' from the very shape o' the 
line an' turn o' the prosidy. As formerly, when Dido was 
askin' iEneas concernin' where he come from, an' where he 
was born, he makes answ r er : — 

' Est locus Hesperiam Graii cogn online dicunt, 
Terra antiqua, potens armis atque ubere glebae. 
Hue cursus fuit.' 

An' there the line stops short, as much as to say, just as I 
cut this line short in spakin' to you, just so our coorse was 
cut in going to Italy. The same way, when Juno is vexed in 
talkin' o' the Throjans, he makes her spake bad Latin to show 
how mad she is : — (Silence ! ) 

' Mene incepto desistere victam 
Nee posse Italia Teucrorum avertere regera? 
Quippe vetor fatis ! Pallasne exurere classem 
Argivum, atque ipsos potuit submergere ponto.' 

So he laves you to guess what a passion she is in, when he 
makes her lave an' infinitive mood without anything to govern 
it. You can't attribute it ignorance, for it would be a dhroli 

4* F 



82 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

thing in airnest, if Juno, the queen of all the gods, did n't 
know a common rule in syntax, so that you have nothing for 
it but to say that she must be the very moral of a jury. 
Such, boys, is the art o' poets an' the janius o' languages. 

" But I kept ye long enough. Go along to yer Greek now, 
as fast as ye can, an' reharse. An' as for ye," continued the 
learned commentator, turning to the mass of English scholars, 
" I see one comin' over the river that 11 taich ye how to be- 
have yerselves, as it is a thing ye won't do for me. Put up 
yer Virgils now, boys, an' out with the Greek, an' remember 
the beauties I pointed out to ye, for they 're things that few 
can explain to ye, if ye have n't the luck to think of 'em yer- 
selves." 

The class* separated, and a hundred anxious eyes were 
directed toward the open door. It afforded a glimpse of a 
sunny green, and a bubbling river, over which Mr. Lenigan, 
followed by his brother David, was now observed in the act 
of picking his cautious way. At this apparition a sudden 
change took place in the entire condition of the school. 
Stragglers flew to their places ; the impatient burst of laugh- 
ter was cut short ; the growing bit of rage was quelled ; the 
uplifted hand dropped harmless by the side of its owner ; 
merry faces grew serious, and angry ones peaceable ; the eyes 
of all seemed poring on their books ; and the extravagant up- 
roar of the last half-hour was hushed on a sudden into a dili- 
gent murmur. Those who were most proficient in the study 
of the ' Masther's ' physiognomy detected in the expression 
of his eyes, as he entered and greeted his assistant, something 
of a troubled and uneasy character. He took the list with a 
severe countenance from the hands of the boy above-men- 
tioned, sent all those whose names he found upon the fatal 
record to kneel down in a corner until he should find leisure 
to ' haire ' them, and then prepared to enter upon his daily 
functions. 

For the present, however, the delinquents are saved by the 
entrance of a fresh character upon the scene. 

The new-comer was a handsome young woman, who carried 



SHIPS AT SEA. 83 

a pet child in her arms and held another Iry the hand. The 
sensation of pleasure which ran among the young culprits at 
her appearance showed her to be their 'great Captain's Cap- 
tain," the beloved and loving helpmate of Mr. Lenigan. 
Casting, nnperceived by her lord, an encouraging smile toward 
the kneeling culprits, she took an opportunity while engaged in 
a wheedling conversation with her husband, to purloin his deal 
rule and to blot out the list of the proscribed from the slate, 
after which she stole out, calling David to dig the potatoes 
for dinner. 

And so we, too, will leave the school. 



SHIPS AT SEA.— Barry Gray. 

I HAVE ships that went to sea 
More than fifty years ago ; 
None have yet come home to me, 

But are sailing to and fro. 
I have seen them in my sleep, 
Plunging through the shoreless deep, 
With tattered sails, and battered hulls, 
While around them screamed the gulls, 
Flying low, — flying low. 

I have wondered why they stayed 

From me, sailing round the world ; 
And I 've said, "I 'm half afraid 

That their sails will ne'er be furled." 
Great the treasure that they hold, — 
Silks, and plumes, and bars of gold ; 
W T hile the spices that they bear 
Fill with fragrance all the air, 
As they sail, — as they sail. 

Ah ! each sailor in the port 
Knows that I have ships at sea, 



84 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Of the waves and winds the sport ; 

And the sailors pity me. 
Oft they come and with me walk, 
Cheering me with hopeful talk, 
Till I put my fears aside, 
And, contented, watch the tide 

Rise and fall, — rise and fall. 

I have waited on the piers, 

Gazing for them down the bay, 
Days and nights, for many years, 

Till I 've turned, heart-sick, away. 
But the pilots, when they land, 
Stop and take me by the hand, 
Saying you will like to see 
Your proud ships come home from sea, 
One and all, — one and all. 

So I never quite despair, 

Nor let hope nor courage fail ; 
And some day, when skies are fair, 

Up the bay my ships will sail. 
I shall buy then all I need, — 
Prints to look at, books to read, 
Horses, wines, and works of art, 
Everything, — except a heart. 
That is lost, — that is lost ! 

Once when I was pure and young, 

Kicher too than I am now, 
Ere a cloud was o'er me flung, 

Or a wrinkle crossed my brow, 
There was one whose heart was mine ; 
But she 's something now divine, 
And though come my ships from sea, 
They can bring no heart to me 
evermore. 



OLD CHUMS. 85 



OLD. CHUMS. — Alice Cart. 

IS it you, Jack 1 Old boy, is it really you 1 
I should n't have known you but that I was told 
You might be expected j — pray, how do you do 1 
But what, under heaven, has made you so old 1 

Your hair ! why, you 've only a little gray fuzz ! 

And your beard 's white ! but that can be beautifully dyed; 
And your legs are n't but just half as long as they was ; 

And then — stars and garters ! your vest is so wide ! 

Is this your hand 1 Lord, how I envied you that 
In the time of our courting, — so soft, and so small, 

And now it is callous inside, and so fat, — 
Well, you beat the very old deuce, that is all. 

Turn round ! let me look at you ! is n't it odd 

How strange in a few years a fellow's chum grows ! 

Your eye is shrunk up like a bean in a pod, 

And what are these lines branching out from your nose ? 

Your back has gone up and your shoulders gone down, 
And all the old roses are under the plough ; 

Why, Jack, if we 'd happened to meet about town, 
I would n't have known you from Adam, I vow ! 

You 've had trouble, have you 1 I 'm sorry ; but, John, 
All trouble sits lightly at your time of life. 

How 's Billy, my namesake 1 You don't say he 's gone 
To the war, John, and that you have buried your wife 1 

Poor Katherine ! so she has left you, — ah me ! 

I thought she would live to be fifty, or more. 
What is it you tell me 1 She was fifty-three ! 

no, Jack ! she was n't so much by a score I 



86 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Well, there 's little Katy, — was that her name, John ? 

She '11 rule your house one of these days like a queen. 
That baby ! good Lord ! is she married and gone 1 

With a Jack ten years old ! and a Katy fourteen ! 

Then I give it up ! Why, you 're younger than I 

By ten or twelve years, and to think you 've come back 

A sober old gray beard, just ready to die ! 

I don't understand how it is, — do you, Jack 1 

I 've got all my faculties yet, sound and bright ; 

Slight failure my eyes are beginning to hint ; 
But still, with my spectacles on, and a light 

'Twixt them and the page, I can read any print. 

My hearing is dull, and my leg is more spare, 
Perhaps, than it was when I beat you at ball ; 

My breath gives out, too, if I go up a stair, — 
But nothing worth mentioning, nothing at all ! 

My hair is just turning a little, you see, 

And lately I 've put on a broader-brimmed hat 

Than I wore at your wedding, but you will agree, 
Old fellow, I look all the better for that. 

I 'm sometimes a little rheumatic, 't is true, 

And my nose is n't quite on a straight line, they say ; 

For all that, I don't think I 've changed much, do you 1 
And I don't feel a day older, Jack, not a day. 



THE OLD MAN'S PRAYER.— Jean Lngelow. 

THERE was a poor old man 
Who sat and listened to the raging sea, 
And heard it thunder, lunging at the cliifs 
As like to tear them down. He lay at night ; 
And " Lord have mercy on the lads," said he, 



THE OLD MAN'S PRAYER. 87 

" That sailed at noon, though they be none of mine ! 

For when the gale gets up, and when the wind 

Flings at the window, when it beats the roof, 

And lulls and stops and rouses up again, 

And cuts the crest clean off the plunging wave, 

And scatters it like feathers up the field, 

Why then I think of my two lads, — my lads 

That would have worked and never let me want, 

And never let me take the parish pay. 

No, none of mine ; my lads were drowned at sea 

My two — before the most of these were born. 

I know how sharp that cuts, since my poor wife 

Walked up and down, and still walked up and down, 

And I walked after, and one could not hear 

A word the other said, for wind and sea 

That raged and beat and thundered in the night, — 

The awfullest, the longest, lightest night 

That ever parents had to spend, — a moon 

That shone like daylight on the breaking wave. 

Ah me ! and other men have lost their lads, 

And other women wiped their poor dead mouths, 

And got them home and dried them in the house, 

And seen the drift-wood lie along the coast, 

That was a tidy boat but one day back, 

And seen next tide the neighbors gather it 

To lay it on their fires. 

Ay, I was strong 
And able-bodied, — loved my work ; — but now 
I am a useless hull ; 't is time I sunk ; 
I am in all men's way ; I trouble them ; 
I am a trouble to myself : but yet 
I feel for mariners of storary nights, 
And feel for wives that watch ashore. Ay, ay ! 
If I had learning I would pray the Lord 
To bring them in : but I 'in no scholar, no ; 
Book-learning is a world too hard for me : 
But I make bold to say, ' Lord, good Lord, 



88 



PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 



I am a broken-down poor man, a fool 

To speak to thee : but in the Book 't is writ, 

As I hear from others that can read, 

How, when thou earnest, thou didst love the sea, 

And live with fisherfolk, whereby 't is sure 

Thou knowest all the peril they go through, 

And all their trouble. 

As for me, good Lord, 
I have no boat ; I am too old, too old, — 
My lads are drowned ; I buried my poor wife ; 
My little lassies died so long ago 
That mostly I forget what they were like. 
Thou knowest, Lord ; they were such little ones 
I know they went to thee, but I forget 
Their faces, though I missed them sore. 

OLord, 
I was a strong man ; I have drawn good food 
And made good money out of thy great sea : 
But yet I cried for them at nights ; and now, 
Although I be so old, I miss "my lads, 
And there be many folk this stormy night 
Heavy with fear for theirs. Merciful Lord, 
Comfort them ; save their honest boys, their pride, 
And let them hear next ebb the blessedest, 
Best sound, — their boat-keels grating on the sand. 



I cannot pray with finer words : I know 
Nothing ; I have no learning, cannot learn, — 
Too old, too old. They say I want for naught, 
I have the parish pay ; but I am dull 
Of hearing, and the fire scarce warms me through. 
God save me, I have been a sinful man, — 
And save the lives of them that still can work, 
For they are good to me ; ay, good to me. 
But, Lord, I am a trouble ! and I sit, 
And I am lonesome, and the nights are few 
That any think to come and draw a chair, 



WAR'S END. 89 

And sit in my poor place and talk awhile. 
Why should they come, forsooth 1 Only the wind 
Knocks at my door, O, long and loud it knocks, 
The only thing God made that has a mind 
To enter in." 

Yea, thus the old man spake : 
These were the last words of his aged mouth, — 
But One did knock. One came to sup with him, 
That humble, weak old man j knocked at his door, 
In the rough pauses of the laboring wind. 
I tell you that One knocked while it was dark, 
Save where their foaming passion had made white 
Those livid seething billows. What he said 
In that poor place where he did talk awhile, 
I cannot tell ; but this I am assured, 
That when the neighbors came the morrow morn, 
What time the wind had bated, and the sun 
Shone on the old man's floor, they saw the smile 
He passed away in, and they said, " He looks 
As he had woke and seen the face of Christ, 
And with that rapturous smile held out his arms 
To come to Him ! " 



WAR'S END. — A. Melville Bell. 

AH ! what inventive skill has man displayed, 
To maim and slay his brother of the sod, — 
Slaughter his pastime, horrid War a trade ! — 
Yet mark how, ordered by a righteous God, 
His skill becomes at once his chastisement and healing rod ! 

A steel-tipped dart drawn back 

And released with a spring, 
And you trace its fluttering track — - 

Like a bird on the wing — 
Whizz ! 



90 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

How it staggers when its targe is won ! 
Whizz ! whizz ! 
Feathered mischief that it is. 

A curling puff of smoke, 
And a quick little flash, 
Then the viewless bullet spoke 
Its message with a rash 
Ping! 
And the vicious thing its work has done. ". 
Ping ! ping ! 
Cruel little leaden thing. 

A rolling coil of smoke 

And scathing gush of fire, 
Then the cannon's roar outbroke 
In a howl of death-desire — 
Bang ! 
And the bloody cleaving ball speeds on. 
Bang ! bang ! 
How the mowing iron sang ! 

A shrouding pall of smoke, 
A winding-sheet of flame, 
Then the splitting thunder-stroke 
That stops the deadly game — 
Boom ! 
And the thing what e'er opposed is gone. 

Granite, iron ramparts, all, 
Swept as cobwebs from the wall ; 
Defence's utmost strength 
O'ermatched by Power at length, — 
Even War has met its doom, 
In that Boom ! 
Whizz ! Ping ! Bang ! Boom ! 
First units fall, then sheaves, then all 's a tomb. 



THE PILGRIMS. 91 

Thanks for that tomb, for from it shall arise 

The spirit of a Universal Peace ! 
To bid just Reason her true place assume, 

Right from brute Might's supremacy release, 
And by the deadliness of war, make war itself to cease ! 



THE PILGRIMS. — J. G. Whittier. 

A "WORTHY New England deacon once described a brother 
in the church as a very good man Godward, but rather 
hard manward. It cannot be denied that some very satisfac- 
tory steps have been taken in the latter direction, at least, 
since the days of the Pilgrims. Our age is tolerant of creed 
and dogma, broader in its sympathies, more keenly sensitive 
to temporal need, and practically recognizing the brotherhood 
of the race ; wherever a cry of suffering is heard, its response 
is quick and generous. It has abolished slavery, and is lift- 
ing woman from world-old degradation to equality with man 
before the law. Our criminal codes no longer embody the 
maxim of barbarism, " An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a 
tooth," but have regard not only for the safety of the com- 
munity, but to the reform and well-being of the criminal. 
All the more, however, for this amiable tenderness do we 
need the counterpoise of a strong sense of justice. With our 
sympathy for the wrong-doer we need the old Puritan and 
Quaker hatred of wrong-doing ; with our just tolerance of 
men and opinions a righteous abhorrence of sin. All the 
more for the sweet humanities and Christian liberalism which, 
in drawing men nearer to each other, are increasing the sum 
of social influences for good or evil, we need the bracing at- 
mosphere, healthful, if austere, of the old moralities. Indi- 
vidual and social duties are quite as imperative now as when 
they were minutely specified in statute-books and enforced 
by penalties no longer admissible. It is well that stocks, 
whipping-post, and ducking-stool are now only matters of tra- 
dition; but the honest reprobation of vice and crime which 



92 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

they symbolized should by no means perish with them. The 
true life of a nation is in its personal morality, and no excel- 
lence of constitution and laws can avail much if the people 
lack purity and integrity. Culture, art, refinement, care for 
our own comfort and that of others, are all well ; but truth, 
honor, reverence, and fidelity to duty are indispensable. 

The Pilgrims were right in affirming the paramount author- 
ity of the law of God. If they erred in seeking that au- 
thoritative law, and passed over the Sermon on the Mount for 
the stern Hebraisms of Moses ; if they hesitated in view of 
the largeness of Christian liberty ; if they seemed unwilling 
to accept the sweetness and light of the good tidings, — let us 
not forget that it was the mistake of men who feared more 
than they dared to hope, whose estimate of the exceeding 
awfulness of sin caused them to dwell upon God's vengeance 
rather than his compassion ; and whose dread of evil was so 
great that, in shutting their hearts against it, they sometimes 
shut out the good. It is well for us if we have learned to 
listen to the sweet persuasion of the Beatitudes ; but there 
are crises in all lives which require also the emphatic " Thou 
shalt not " of the Decalogue which the founders wrote on the 
gate-posts of their commonwealth. 

Let us, then, be thankful for the assurances which the last 
few years have afforded us that 

" The Pilgrim spirit is not dead, 
But walks in noon's broad light." 

We have seen it in the faith and trust which no circumstances 
could shake, in heroic self-sacrifice, in entire consecration to 
duty. The fathers have lived in their sons. Have we not 
all known the Winthrops and Brewsters, the Saltonstalls and 
Sewalls, of old times, in gubernatorial chairs, in legislative 
halls, around winter camp-fires, in the slow martyrdoms of 
prison and hospital 1 The great struggle through which we 
have passed has taught us how much we owe to the men and 
women of the Plymouth Colony, — the noblest ancestry that 
ever a people looked back to with love and reverence. Honor, 
then, to the Pilgrims ! Let their memory be green forever ! 



KNOCKED ABOUT. 93 



KNOCKED ABOUT. — Daniel Connolly. 

WHY don't I work 1 Well, sir, will you, 
Right here on the spot, give me suthin' to do 1 
Work ! Why, sir, I don't want no more 
'N a chance in any man's shop or store ; 
That 's what I 'm lookin' for every day, 
But thar ain't no jobs ; well, what d' ye say ? 
Hain't got nothin' at present ! Just so ; 
That 's how it always is, I know ! 

Fellers like me ain't wanted much ; 
Folks are gen'rally jealous of such ; 
Thinks tl^ey ain't the right sort o' stuff, — 
Blessed if it is n't a kind o' rough 
On a man to have folks hintin' belief 
That he ain't to be trusted more 'n a thief, 
When p'r'aps his fingers are cleaner far 
'N them o' chaps that talk so are ! 

Got a look o' the sea 1 Well, I 'xpect that 's so ; 

Had a hankerin' that way some years ago, 

And run off ; I shipped in a whaler fust, 

And got cast away ; but that warn't the wust ; 

Took fire, sir, next time, we did, and — well, 

We blazed up till everything standin' fell, 

And then me and Tom — my mate — and some murts, 

Got off, with a notion of goin' ashore. 

But thar warn't no shore to see round that-, 

So we drifted and drifted everywhar 

For a week, and then all but Tom and me 

Was food for the sharks or down in the sea. 

But we prayed — me and Tom — - the best we could, 

For a sail. It come, nnd at last we stood 

On old arth once more, and the captain 'told 

Us we was ashore in the land o' gold. 



94 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Gold ! We did n't get much. But we struck 

For the mines, of course, and tried our luck. 

'T warn't bad at the start, but things went wrong 

Pooty soon, for one night thar come along, 

While we was asleep, some redskin chaps, 

And they made things lively round thar — perhaps ! 

Anyhow we left mighty quick — Tom and me, 

And we did n't go back, — kind o' risky, yer see ! 

By'm-by, sir, the war come on, and then 
We 'listed. Poor Tom ! I was nigh him when 
It all happened. He looked up and sez, sez he, 
" Bill, it 's come to partin' 'twixt you and me, 
Old chap. I hain't much to leave — here, this knife 
Stand to your colors, Bill, while you have life ! " 
That was all. — Yes, got wounded myself, sir, here, 
And — I 'm pensioned on water and air a year ! 

It ain't much to thank for that I 'm alive, 
Knockin' about like this — What, a five ! 
That 's suthin' han'some, now, that is. I 'm blest 
If things don't quite frequent turn out for the best 
Arter all ! A V ! Hi ! Luck ! It 's far more ! 
Mister, I kind o' liked the looks o' your store. 
You 're a trump, sir, a reg — Eh % 0, all right ! 
I 'm off, — but you are, sir, a trump, honor bright ! 









THE LABORER. — William D. Gallagher. 

STAND up — erect ! Thou hast the form 
And likeness of thy God ! — who more 1 
A soul as dauntless 'mid the storm 
Of daily life, a heart as warm 
And pure, as breast e'er wore. 

What then 1 — Thou art as true a man 
As moves the human mass among ; 



THE LABORER. 95 

As much a part of the great plan 
That with Creation's dawn began, 
As any of the throng. 

Who is thine enemy 1 the high 

In station, or in wealth the chief 1 
The great, who coldly, pass thee by, 
With proud step and averted eye ?, 

Nay ! Nurse not such belief. 

If true unto thyself thou wast, 

What were the proud one's scorn to theel 
A feather, which thou mightest cast 
Aside, as idly as the blast 

The light leaf from the tree. 

No ; — uncurbed passions, low desires, 

Absence of noble self-respect, 
Death, in the breast's consuming fires 
To that high nature which aspires 

Forever, till thus checked, — 

These are thy enemies, — thy worst ; 

They chain thee to thy lowly lot, 
Thy labor and thy life accursed : 
0, stand erect ! and from them burst, 

And longer suffer not ! 

Thou art thyself thine enemy ! 
The great ! — what better they than thou *? 
As theirs is not thy will as free ? 
Has God with equal favors thee 
Neglected to endow 1 

True, wealth thou hast not, — 't is but dust ! 

Nor place, — uncertain as the wind ! 
But that thou hast which, with thy crust 



96 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

And water, may despise the lust 
Of both, — a noble mind. 

With this, and passions under ban, 
True faith, and holy trust in God, 

Thou art the peer of any man. 

Look up, then ; & that thy little span 
Of life may well be trod. 



THE GRAY FOREST EAGLE.— A. B. Street. 

WITH storm-daring pinion, and sun-gazing eye, 
The Gray Forest Eagle is King of the sky ! 
0, little he loves the green valley of flowers, 
Where sunshine and song cheer the bright summer hours, 
But the dark, gloomy gorge, where down plunges the foam 
Of the fierce, rocky torrent, he claims as his home ; 
There he blends his keen shriek with the roar of the flood, 
And the many-voiced sounds of the blast-smitten wood. 

A fitful red glaring, a low, rumbling jar, 
Proclaim the Storm-Demon, yet raging afar ; 
The black cloud strides upward, the lightning more red, 
And the roll of the thunder, more deep and more dread : 
The Gray Forest Eagle, where, where has he sped 1 
Does he shrink to his eyry, and shiver with dread 1 
Does the glare blind his eyes 1 Has the terrible blast 
On the wing of the Sky-King a fear-fetter cast % 

no, the brave Eagle ! he thinks not of fright ; 
The wrath of the tempest but rouses delight ; 
To the flash of the lightning his eye casts a gleam, 
To the shriek of the wild blast he echoes his scream, 
And with front like a warrior that speeds to the fray, 
And a clapping of pinions, he 's up and away ! 
Away, away, soars the fearless and free ! 



THE GRAY FOREST EAGLE. 97 

What recks he the sky's strife 1 — its monarch is he ! 
The lightning darts round him, — undaunted his sight ; 
The blast sweeps against him, — unwavered his flight ; 
High upward, still upward he wheels, till his form 
Is lost in the dark scowling gloom of the storm. 

The tempest glides o'er with its terrible train, 

And the splendor of sunshine is glowing again ; 

And full on the form of the tempest in flight, 

The rainbow's magnificence gladdens the sight ! 

The Gray Forest Eagle ! 0, where is he now, 

While the sky wears the smile of its God on its brow 1 

There 's a dark floating spot by yon cloud's pearly wreath^ 

With the speed of the arrow 't is shooting beneath ; 

Down, nearer and nearer, it draws to .the gaze, — 

Now over the rainbow, — now blent with its blaze ; 

'T is the Eagle, — the Gray Forest Eagle ! — once more 

He sweeps to his eyry, — his journey is o'er ! 

Time whirls round his circle, his years roll away, 
But the Gray Forest Eagle minds little his sway ; 
The child spurns its buds for youth's thorn-hidden bloom 
Seeks manhood's bright phantoms, finds age and a tomb ; 
But the Eagle's eye dims not, his wing is unbowed, 
Still drinks he the sunshine, still scales he the cloud. 

An emblem of Freedom, stern, haughty, and high, 
Is the Gray Forest Eagle, that King of the sky ! 
When his shadows steal black o'er the empires of kings, 
Deep terror, — deep heart-shaking terror, — he brings ; 
Where wicked oppression is armed for the weak, 
There rustles his pinion, there echoes his shriek ; 
His eye flames with vengeance, he sweeps on his way, 
And his talons are bathed in the blood of his prey. 

that Eagle of Freedom ! when cloud upon cloud 
Swathed the sky of my own native land with a shroud, 



98 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

When lightnings gleamed fiercely, and thunderbolts rung, 
How proud to the tempest those pinions were flung ! 
Though the wild blast of battle rushed fierce through the air 
With darkness and dread, still the Eagle was there ; 
Unquailing, still speeding, his swift flight was on, 
Till the rainbow of Peace crowned the victory won. 

0, that Eagle of Freedom ! age dims not his eye, 
He has seen earth's mortality spring, bloom, and die ! 
He has seen the strong nations rise, flourish, and fall ; 
He mocks at time's changes, he triumphs o'er all ; 
He has seen our own land with wild forests o'erspread, 
He sees it with sunshine and joy on its head ; 
And his presence will bless this his own chosen clime, 
Till the Archangel's fiat is set upon Time. 



WHEN MARY WAS A LASSIE. 

THE maple-trees are tinged with red, 
The birch with golden yellow \ 
And high above the orchard wall 
Hang apples, rich and mellow ; 
And that 's the way, through yonder lane 

That looks so still and grassy, — 
The way I took one Sunday eve, 
When Mary was a lassie. 

You 'd hardly think that patient face, 

That looks so thin and faded, 
Was once the very sweetest one 

That ever bonnet shaded ; 
But when I went through yonder lane, 

That looks so still and grassy, 
Those eyes were bright, those cheeks were fair, 

When Mary was a lassie. 



THE PIANO MANIA. 99 

But many a tender sorrow, 

And many a patient care, 
Have made those furrows on the face 

That used to be so fair. 
Four times to yonder churchyard, 

Through the lane, so still and grassy, 
We 've borne and laid away our dead, 

Since Mary was a lassie. 

And, as you see, I Ve grown to love 

The wrinkles more than roses ; 
Earth's winter flowers are sweeter far 

Than all spring's dewy posies : 
They '11 carry us through yonder lane 

That looks so still and grassy, 
Adown the lane I used to go 

When Mary was a lassie. 



THE PIANO MANIA. — Jennie June. 

THERE is no social disease so widespread, so virulent, and 
so fatal in its attack as the piano mania. Before a girl 
is born, nowadays, she is predestined to sit and exact dreadful 
screechings and wailings from some unhappy instrument for 
at least ten years of her natural life. No question as to 
whether she possesses an ear, and no consideration for the ears 
of other people, is permitted to interfere with the decree, 
which is irrevocable as the laws of the Medes and Persians, 
that " Katy " or " Lucindy," as the case may be, " must play 
the piano." The poor thing may be a natural-born house- 
keeper, with a genius for sweeping and dusting, washing and 
baking, but with no more perception of chords and cadences 
than of the music of the spheres. Still she will not be per- 
mitted to follow her natural bent because it is so horribly vul- 
gar. She will be wept over, scolded, and fretted at, and any 



L**a 



100 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

lazy, fine lady, sister, or cousin held up as an example of gen- 
tility. 

To be able to play the piano in company is the sine qua non of 
many foolish, fond mothers' hopes, who look back with regret 
on their own limited chances for education, and are therefore 
apt sadly to overrate the value of what are called accom- 
plishments. Playing the piano is undoubtedly a very good 
thing when it is well done, and by a person who possesses musi- 
cal taste ; but otherwise it is only a torture for a sensitive 
ear to listen to it. Jingle, jingle, jingle ! thump, thump, 
thump ! Who has not shivered and winced, and tried to ap- 
pear amiable through the interminable hours of a small even- 
ing-party, while some youthful tormentor, harassed into the 
display by stupid friends, was vigorously pounding out a 
miscellaneous assortment of battles and marches, songs and 
quadrilles, waltzes and opera, without the slightest notion con- 
cerning them, except that certain keys in the piano corre- 
spond to certain notes in the book. 

Excepting for evening parlor dances, the piano should never 
be played without accompaniment of a voice, unless by a 
Thalberg, and even then only a few will be found to care en- 
thusiastically for the mere science or grace of execution ; and 
if this is true of the professor in the art, how much pleasure 
is it supposed can be obtained from hearing the monotonous or 
spasmodic thrumming of a girl, whose entire capacity for 
music has been scolded or cajoled into her, and who would 
much rather be employed in doing something else, even 
though it were sweeping or washing dishes ! 

If the knowledge of the piano were easily acquired and re- 
tained, the objections against this universal passion would lose 
much of their force ; but the truth is, that it wastes so much 
of the valuable time in many young girls' lives that could be 
turned to good account, that it becomes absolute sin ; and 
what real use do they make of it after all % How many 
young women who were supposed to possess musical talents 
have made the remark, " 0, I have never touched the piano 
since I was married ! " — an exaggerated statement, which soon 
becomes a literal truth. 



FONTENOY. 101 

The truth is, that "playing the piano " don't pay, unless a 
certain amount of musical genius is developed, and a voice. 
Any quantity of girls could perfect themselves in other and 
quite as attractive branches of a " polite education" for 
which they have a taste, and prepare to become good wives 
and mothers in the time which is uselessly spent in endeavor- 
ing to make them " play the piano." 

But there is little hope that it will be so. Fathers will 
continue to gratify their pride and vanity by buying second- 
hand pianos instead of sewing-machines, and mothers will 
urge slipshod daughters to sit down to them, instead of teach- 
ing them to mend stockings. The signor's bill will be pre- 
ferred to the grocer's, because " the girls "must have the advan- 
tage of the best, — that is to say, the most expensive masters, 
— and so they are taught lessons in music, extravagance, dis- 
honesty, and personal neglect, all at the same time. Surely 
a cheap way of acquiring so much that is made available in 
after life, besides learning to play on the piano. 



FONTENOY. — Thomas Davis. 

THRICE, at the huts of Fontenoy, the English column 
failed, 
And twice the lines of St. Antoine the Dutch in vain assailed ; 
For town and slope were filled with fort and flanking battery, 
And well they swept the English ranks, and Dutch auxiliary. 
As, vainly, through De Barri's wood the British soldiers 

burst, 
The French artillery drove them back, diminished and dis- 
persed. 
The bloody Duke of Cumberland beheld with anxious eye, 
And ordered up his last reserve his latest chance to try. 
On Fontenoy, on Fontenoy, how fast his generals ride, 
And mustering come his chosen troops, like clouds at even' 
tide. 



102 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Six thousand English veterans in stately column tread, 
Their cannon blaze in front and flank, — Lord Hay is at their 

head ; 
Steady they step adown the slope, — steady they climb the 

hill; ' 
Steady they load, — steady they fire, moving right onward 

still, 
Betwixt the wood and Fontenoy, as through a furnace blast, 
Through rampart, trench, and palisade, and bullets showering 

fast ; 
And on the open plain above they rose, and kept their course, 
With ready fire and grim resolve, that mocked at hostile 

force ; 
Past Fontenoy, past Fontenoy, while thinner grow their ranks, 
They break, as broke the Zuyder Zee through Holland's ocean 

banks. 

More idly than the summer flies, French tirailleurs rush 
round ; 

As stubble to the lava tide, French squadrons strew the 
ground ; 

Bomb-shell, and grape, and round-shot tore, still on they 
marched and fired, — 

Fast from each volley grenadier and voltigeur retired. 

" Push on, my household cavalry ! " King Louis madly cried ; 

To death they rush, but rude their shock, — not unavenged 
they died. 

On through the camp the column trod, — King Louis turns 
his rein : 

" Not yet, my liege," Saxe interposed, " the Irish troops re- 
main " ; 

And Fontenoy, famed Fontenoy, had been a Waterloo, 

Were not these exiles ready then, fresh, vehement, and true. 

" Lord Clare," he says, " you have your wish, there are your 

Saxon foes ! " 
The Marshal almost smiles to see how furiously he goes ! 



FONTENOY. 103 

How fierce the look those exiles wear, who 're won't to be so 

The treasured wrongs of fifty years are in their hearts to- 
day, — 

The treaty broken, ere the ink wherewith 'twas writ could 
dry, 

Their plundered homes, their ruined shrines, their women's 
parting cry, 

Their priesthood hunted down like wolves, their country over- 
thrown, 

Each looks as if revenge for all were staked on him alone. 

On Fontenoy, on Fontenoy, nor ever yet elsewhere, 

Rushed on to fight a nobler band than these proud exiles 
were. 

O'Brien's voice is hoarse with joy, as, halting, he commands, 

" Fix bayonets — charge ! " Like mountain storm rush on 
these fiery bands. 

Thin is the English column now, and faint their volleys grow, 

Yet, mustering all the strength they have, they make a gal- 
lant show. 

They dress their ranks upon the hill to face that battle-wind, 

Their bayonets the breaker's foam ; like rocks, the men be- 
hind ! 

One volley crashes from their line, when, through the surging 
smoke, 

With empty guns clutched in their hands, the headlong Irish 
broke. 

On Fontenoy, on Fontenoy, hark to that fierce huzza ! 

" Revenge ! remember Limerick ! dash down the Sacsanach ! " 

Like lions leaping at a fold, when mad with hunger's pang, 
Right up against the English line the Irish exiles sprang ; 
Bright was their steel, 't is bloody now, their guns are filled 

with gore ; 
Through shattered ranks, and severed files, and trampled flags 

they tore : 



104 PUBLIC AND- PARLOR READINGS. 

The English strove with desperate strength, paused, rallied, 

staggered, fled — 
The green hillside is matted close with dying and with dead. 
Across the plain and far away passed on that hideous wrack, 
"While cavalier and fantassin dash in upon their track. 
On Fontenoy, on Fontenoy, like eagles in the sun, 
With bloody plumes the Irish stand, — the field is fought and 

won ! 



BEAUTIFUL SNOW.— J. W. Watson. 

OTHE snow, the beautiful snow, 
Filling the sky and earth below ; 
Over the house-tops, over the street, 
Over the heads of the people you meet, 
Dancing, 

Flirting, 

Skimming along ; 
Beautiful snow ; it can do no wrong. 
Flying to kiss a fair lady's cheek ; . 
Clinging to lips in a frolicsome freak. 
Beautiful snow from the heavens above, 
Pure as an angel, gentle as love ! 

the snow, the beautiful snow ! 
How the flakes gather and laugh as they go ! 
Whirling about in the maddening fun, 
It plays in its glee with every one. 
Chasing, 

Laughing, 

Hurrying by ; 
It lights on the face and it sparkles the eye I 
And even the dogs, with a bark and a bound, 
Snap at the crystals that eddy around. 
The town is alive, and its heart in a glow, 
To welcome the coming of beautiful snow ! 



THE SNOW. 105 

How the wild crowd goes swaying along, 
Hailing each other with humor and song ! 
How the gay sledges, like meteors, flash by, 
Bright for the moment, then lost to the eye. 
Ringing, 

Swinging, 

Dashing they go, 
Over the crust of the beautiful snow ; 
Snow so pure when it falls from the sky, 
To be trampled in mud by the crowd rushing by, 
To be trampled and tracked by the thousands of feet, 
Till it blends with the horrible filth in the street. 

Once I was pure as the snow — but I fell : 
Fell like the snow-flakes from heaven — to hell ; 
Fell to be trampled as filth of the street ; 
Fell to be scoffed, to be spit on and beat. 
Pleading, 

Cursing, 

Dreading to die, 
Selling my soul to whoever would buy, 
Dealing in shame for a morsel of bread, 
Hating the living and fearing the dead. 
Merciful God ! have I fallen so low 1 
And yet I was once like the beautiful snow. 

Once I was fair as the beautiful snow, 
With an eye like its crystal, a heart like its glow ; 
Once I was loved for my innocent grace, — 
Flattered and sought for the charms of my face ! 
Father, 

Mother, 

Sisters all, 
God, and myself, I have lost by my fall. 
The veriest wretch that goes shivering by 
Will take a wide sweep lest I wander too nigh ; 
For of all that is on or about me, I know 
There is nothing that 's pure but the beautiful snow. 



106 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

How strange it should be that this beautiful snow 
Should fall on a sinner with nowhere to go ! 
How strange it would be, when the night comes again, 
If the snow and the ice struck my desperate brain ! 
Fainting, 

Freezing, 

Dying alone, 
Too wicked for a prayer, too weak for a moan, 
To be heard in the crash of the crazy town, 
Gone mad in its joy at the snow's coming down, 
To lie, and so die in my terrible woe, 
With a bed and a shroud of the beautiful snow. 



LOVE LIGHTENS LABOR. 

A GOOD wife rose from her bed one morn, 
And thought with a nervous dread 
Of the piles of clothes to be washed, and more 

Than a dozen mouths to be fed. 
There 's the meals to get for the men in the field, 

And the children to fix away 
To school, and the milk to be skimmed and churned; 
And all to be done this day. 

It had rained in the night, and all the wood 

Was wet as it could be ; 
There were puddings and pies to bake, besides 

A loaf of cake for tea. 
And the day was hot, and her aching head 

Throbbed wearily as she said : 
" If maidens but knew what good wives know, 

They would be in no haste to wed i " 

" Jennie, what do you think I told Ben Brown 1 " 
Called the farmer from the well ; 



THE RING. 107 

And a flush crept up to his bronzed brow, 

And his eyes half bashfully fell. 
" It was this," he said, and, coming near, 

He smiled, and, stooping down, 
Kissed her cheek. — " 'T was this : that you were the best 

And the dearest wife in town ! " 

The farmer went back to the field, and the wife, 

In a smiling and absent way, 
Sang snatches of tender little songs 

She 'd not sung for many a day. 
And the pain in her head was gone, and the clothes 

Were white as the foam of the sea ; 
Her bread was light, and her butter was sweet 

And as golden as it could be. 

' Just think," the children all called in a breath, 

••" Tom Wood has run off to sea ! 
He would n't, I know, if he only had 

As happy a home as we." 
The night came down, and the good wife smiled 

To herself, as she softly said : 
" 'T is so sweet to labor for those we love, 

It 's not strange that maids will wed ! " 



THE RING. — G. E. Lessing. 

Translated by Miss Frothtngham. 

IN gray antiquity there lived a man 
In Eastern lands, who had received a ring 
Of priceless worth from a beloved hand. 
Its stone, an opal, flashed a hundred colors, 
And had the secret power of giving favor, 
In sight of God and man, to him who wore it 
With a believing heart. What wonder, then, 



108 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

This Eastern man would never put the ring 
From off his finger, and should so provide 
That to his house it be preserved forever 1 
Such was the case. Unto the best-beloved 
Among his sons he left the ring, enjoining 
That he in turn bequeath it to the son 
Who should be dearest ; and the dearest ever, 
In virtue of the ring, without regard 
To birth, be of the house the prince and head. 

From son to son the ring, descending, came 

To one, the sire of three ; of whom all three 

"Were equally obedient ; whom all three 

He therefore must with equal love regard. 

And yet, from time to time, now this, now that, 

And now the third, — as each alone was by, 

The others not dividing his fond heart, — 

Appeared to him the worthiest of the ring ; 

Which then, with loving weakness, he would promise 

To each in turn. Thus it continued long. 

But he must die ; and then the loving father 

Was sore perplexed. It grieved him thus to wound 

Two faithful sons who trusted in his word ; 

But what to do 1 In secrecy he calls 

An artist to him, and commands of him 

Two other rings, the pattern of his own ; 

And bids him neither cost nor pains to spare 

To make them like, precisely like to that. 

The artist's skill succeeds. He brings the rings, 

And e'en the father cannot tell his own. 

Relieved and joyful summons he his sons, 

Each by himself; to each one by himself 

He gives his blessing, and his ring, — and dies. 

But bring your story to an end. 'T is ended, 

For what remains would tell itself. The father 

Was scarcely dead, when each brings forth his ring, 

And claims the headship. Questioning ensues, 






THE RING. 109 

Strife, and appeal to law ; but all in vain. 
The genuine ring was not to be distinguished, — 
As undistinguishable as with us 
The true religion. 

As I have said 
The sons appealed to law, and each took oath 
Before the judge, that from his father's hand 
He had the ring, — as was indeed the truth, — 
And had received his promise long before, 
One day the ring, with all its privileges, 
Should be his own, — as was not less the truth. 
The father could not have been false to him, 
Eoi/h one maintained ; and rather than allow 
Upon the memory of so dear a father 
Such stain to rest, he must against his brothers, 
Though gladly he would nothing but the best 
Believe of them, bring charge of treachery ; 
Means would he find the traitors to expose, 
And be revenged on them. 

Thus spoke the judge : Produce your father 
At once before me, else from my tribunal 
Do I dismiss you. Think you I am here 
To guess your riddles 1 Either would you wait 
Until the genuine ring shall speak 1 — But hold ! 
A magic power in the true ring resides, 
As I am told, to make its wearer loved, 
Pleasing to God and man. Let that decide, 
For in the false can no such virtue lie. 
Which one among you, then, do two love best 1 
Speak ! Are you silent 1 Work the rings but backward, 
Not outward 1 Loves each one himself the best 1 
Then cheated cheats are all of you ! The rings, 
All three, are false. The genuine ring was lost; 
And to conceal, supply the loss, the father 
Made three in place of one. 



110 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Go, therefore, said the judge, unless my counsel 

You 'd have in place of sentence. It were this : 

Accept the case exactly as it stands. 

Had each his ring directly from his father, 

Let each believe his own is genuine. 

'T is possible your father would no longer 

His house to one ring's tyranny subject ; 

And certain that all three of you he loved, 

Loved equally, since two he would not humble 

That one might be exalted. Let each one 

To his unbought, impartial love aspire ; 

Each with the others vie to bring to light 

The virtue of the stone within his ring ; 

Let gentleness, a hearty love of peace, 

Beneficence, and perfect trust in God, 

Come to its help. Then, if the jewel's power 

Among your children's children be revealed, 

I bid you, in a thousand thousand years, 

Again before this bar. A wiser man 

Than I shall occupy this seat, and speak. 

Go ! Thus the modest judge dismissed them. 



THE MERRY SOAP-BOILER. 

A STEADY and a skilful toiler, 
John got his bread as a soap-boiler ; 
Earned all he wished, — his heart was light, 
He worked and sang from morn till night. 
E'en during meals his notes were heard, 
And to his beer were oft preferred ; 
At breakfast, and at supper too, 
His throat had double work to do. 
He oftener sang than said his prayers, 
And dropped asleep while humming airs ; 
Until his every next-door neighbor 



THE MERRY SOAP-BOILER. Ill 

Had learned the tunes that cheered his labor, 

And every passer-by could tell 

Where merry John was wont to dwell. 

At reading he was rather slack, 

Studied at most the almanac, 

To know when holidays were nigh, 

And put his little savings by ; 

But sang the more on vacant days, 

To waste the less his means and ways. 

'T is always well to live and learn. 

The owner of the soap concern — 

A fat and wealthy burgomaster, 

Who drank his hock and smoked his knaster, 

At marketing was always apter 

Than any prelate in the chapter, 

And thought a pheasant in sour-krout 

Superior to a turkey-poult ; 

But woke at times before daybreak 

With heartburn, gout, or liver-ache — 

Oft heard our skylark of the garret 

Sing to his slumber, but to mar it. 

He sent for John one day, and said, 

" What 's your year's income from your trade % " 

" Master, I never thought of counting 

To what my earnings are amounting 

At the year's end ; if every Monday 

I 've paid my meat and drink for Sunday, 

And something in the box unspent 

Remains for fuel, clothes, and rent, 

I 've husbanded the needful scot, 

And feel quite easy with my lot. 

The maker of the almanac 

Must, like your lordship, know no lack, 

Else a red-letter, earnless day 

Would oftener be struck away." 



112 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

" John, you 've been long a faithful fellow, 
Though always merry, seldom mellow. 
Take this rouleau of fifty dollars, — 
My purses glibly slip their collars, — 
But before breakfast let this singing 
No longer in my ears be ringing ; 
When once your lips and eyes unclose, 
I must forego my morning doze." 

John blushes, bows, and stammers thanks, 
And steals away on bended shanks, 
Hiding and hugging his new treasure, 
As had it been a stolen seizure. 
At home he bolts his chamber-door, 
Views, counts, and weighs his tinkling store, 
Nor trusts it to the savings-box 
Till he has screwed on double locks. 
His dog and he play tricks no more, 
They 're rival watchmen of the door. 
Small wish has he to sing a word, 
Lest thieves should climb his stair unheard. 
At length he finds, the more he saves, 
The more he frets, the more he craves ; 
That his old freedom was a blessing 
111 sold for all he 's now possessing. 

One day, he to his master went 
And carried back his hoard unspent. 
"Master," says he, "I 've heard of old, 
Dnblest is he who watches gold. 
Take back your present, and restore 
The cheerfulness I knew before. 
I '11 take a room not quite so near, 
Out of your worship's reach of ear, 
Sing at my pleasure, laugh at sorrow, 
Enjoy to-day, nor dread to-morrow, 
Be still the steady, honest toiler, 
The merry John, the old soap-boiler." 



DEATH OF POOR JO. 113 



DEATH OF POOR JO. — Dickens. 

JO is very glad to see his old friend, and says, when they 
are left alone, that he takes it uncommon kind as Mr. 
Sangsby should come so far out of his way on accounts of sich 
as him. Mr. Snagsby, touched by the spectacle before him, 
immediately lays upon the table half a crown, — that magic 
balm of his for all kinds of wounds. 

" And how do you find yourself, my poor lad 1 " inquires the 
stationer, with his cough of sympathy. 

"I am in luck, Mr. Sangsby, I am," returns Jo, "and don't 
want for nothink. I 'm more cumf bier nor you can't think. 
Mr. Sangsby ! I 'm wery sorry that I done it, but I did n't 
go fur to do it, sir." 

The stationer softly lays down another half-crown, and asks 
him what it is that he is so sorry for having done. 

11 Mr. Sangsby," says Jo, "I w T ent and give a illness to the 
lady as wos and yit as warn't the t'other lady, and none of 'em 
never says nothink to me for having done it, on accounts of 
their being ser good and my having been s' unfortnet. The 
lady come herself and see me yesday, and she ses, ' Ah, Jo ! ■ 
she ses. 4 We thought we 'd lost you, Jo ! ' she ses. And she 
sits down a smilin' so quiet, and don't pass a word nor yit a 
look upon me for having done it, she don't, and I turns agin 
the wall, I doos, Mr. Sangsby. And Mr. Jarnders, I see him 
forced to turn away his own self. And Mr. Woodcot, he come 
fur to giv me somethink for to ease me, wot he 's alius a doin' 
on day and night, and wen he come a bendin' over me and a 
speakin' up so bold, I see his tears a fallin', Mr. Sangsby." 

The softened stationer deposits another half-crown on the 
table. Nothing less than a repetition of that infallible remedy 
will relieve his feelings. 

" Wot I wos a thinkin' on, Mr. Sangsby," proceeds Jo, "wos, 
as you wos able to write wery large, p'r'aps ] " 

"Yes, Jo, please God," returns the stationer. 

" Uncommon precious large, p'r'aps 1 " says Jo, with eager- 
ness. 



114 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

u Yes, my poor boy." 

Jo laughs with pleasure. " Wot I was thinkin' on then, Mr. 
Sangsby, wos, that wen I was moved on as fur as ever I could 
go and could n't be moved no furder, whether you might be 
so good, p'r'aps, as to write out, wery large so that any one 
could see it anywheres, as that I wos wery truly hearty sorry 
that I done it and that I never went fur to do it ; and that 
though I did n't know nothink at all, I knowd as Mr. Wood- 
cot once cried over it and wos alius grieved over it, and that 
I hoped as he 'd be able to forgiv me in his mind. If the 
writin' could be made to say it wery large, he might." 

" It shall say it, Jo. Very large." 

Jo laughs again. " Thank'ee, Mr. Sangsby. It 's wery kind 
of you, sir, and it makes me more cumf bier nor I was afore." 
'The meek little stationer, with a broken and unfinished 
cough, slips down his fourth half-crown, — he has never been 
so close to a case requiring so many, — and is fain to depart. 
And Jo and he upon this little earth shall meet no more. 
No more. 

For the cart, so hard to draw, is near its journey's end, and 
drags over stony ground. All round the clock, it labors up 
the broken steeps, shattered and worn. Not many times can 
the sun rise, and behold it still upon its weary road. 

Jo is in a sleep or stupor to-day, and Allan Woodcourt, 
newly arrived, stands by him, looking down upon his wasted 
form. After a while, he softly seats himself upon the bedside 
with his face toward him, and touches his chest and heart. 
The cart had very nearly given up, but labors on a little 
more. 

" Well, Jo ! What is the matter ? Don't be frightened." 
" I thought," says Jo, who has started, and is looking 
round, — "I thought I was in Tom-all-Alone's agin. An't 
there nobody here but you, Mr. Woodcot?" 
"Nobody." 

" And I an't took back to Tom-all-Alone's. Am I, sir 1 " 
" No." Jo closes his eyes, muttering, " I 'm wery thankful." 



DEATH OF POOR JO. 115 

After watching him closely a little while, Allan puts his 
mouth very near his ear, and says to him in a low, distinct 
voice, — 

" Jo ! Did you ever know a prayer 1 " 

" Never knowd nothink, sir." 

" Not so much as one short prayer ? " 

"No, sir. Nothink at all. Mr. Chadbands he wos a prayin' 
wunst at Mr. Sangsby's, and I heerd him, but he sounded as 
if he wos speakin' to hisself, and not to me. He prayed a 
lot, but / could n't make out nothink on it. Different times 
there wos other genlmen come down Tom-all- Alone's a prayin', 
but they all mostly sed as the t' other wuns prayed wrong, and 
all mostly sounded to be a talking to theirselves, or a passing 
blame on the t' others, and not a talkin' to us. We never 
knowd nothink. / never knowd what it wos all about." 

It takes him a long time to say this ; and few but an 
experienced and attentive listener could hear, or, hearing, 
understand him. After a short relapse into sleep or stupor, 
he makes, of a sudden, a strong effort to get out of bed. 

'' Stay, Jo, stay ! What now 1 " 

"It 's time for me to go to that there berryin-ground, sir," 
he returns, with a wild look. 

" Lie down, and tell me. What burying-ground, Jo 1 " 

" Where they laid him as wos wery good to me ; wery good 
to me indeed, he wos. It 's time fur me to go down to that 
there berryin-ground, sir, and ask to be put along with him. 
I wants to go there and be berried. He used fur to say to 
me, ' I am as poor as you to-day, Jo,' he ses. I wants to tell 
him that I am as poor as him now, and have come there to 
be laid along with him." 

" By and by, Jo. By and by." 

" Ah ! P'r'aps they would n't do it if I wos to go myself. 
But will you promise to have me took there, sir, and have me 
laid along with him 1 " 

"I will, indeed." 

" Thank'ee, sir ! Thank'ee, sir ! They '11 have to get the key 
of the gate afore they can take m<2 in, for it 's alius locked. 



116 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

And there 's a step there, as I used fur to clean with my 
broom. It 's turned wery dark, sir. Is there any light 
a comin' 1 " 

" It is coming fast, Jo." 

Fast. The cart is shaken all to pieces, and the rugged 
road is very near its end. 

" Jo, my poor fellow ! " 

" I hear you, sir, in the dark, but I 'm a gropin', — a gropin', 
— let me catch hold of your hand." 

" Jo, can you say what I say 1 " 

" I '11 say anythink as you say, sir, for I knows it 's good." 

"Our Father." 

" Our Father ! — yes, that 's wery good, sir." 
' " Which art in Heaven." 

" Art in Heaven — is the light a comin', sir 1 " 

" It is close at hand. Hallowed be thy name ! " 

" Hallowed be — thy — name ! " 

The light is come upon the dark benighted war. Dead ! 

Dead, your Majesty. Dead, my lords and gentlemen. Dead, 
Right Reverends and Wrong Reverends of every orde*\ Dead, 
men and women, born with heavenly compassion m your 
hearts. And dying thus around us every day ! 



ADDRESS OF LEONID AS. — Richard Glover. 

HE alone 
Remains unshaken. Rising, he displays 
His godlike presence. Dignity and grace 
Adorn his frame, and manly beauty, joined 
With strength herculean. On his aspect shines 
Sublimest virtue and desire of fame, 
Where justice gives the laurel ; in his eye 
The inextinguishable spark, which fires 
The souls of patriots ; while his brow supports 
Undaunted valor and contempt of death. 



> ! 



ANNABEL LEE. 117 

Serene he rose, and thus addressed the throng : 
M Why this astonishment on every face, 
Ye men of Sparta 1 Does the name of death 
Create this fear and wonder 1 my friends ! 
Why do we labor through the arduous paths 
Which lead to virtue 1 Fruitless were the toil, 
Above the reach of human feet were placed 
The distant summit, if the fear of death 
Could intercept our passage. Bat in vain 
His blackest frowns and terrors he assumes 
To shake the firmness of the mind which knows 
That, wanting virtue, life is pain and woe ; 
That, wanting liberty, even virtue mourns, 
And looks around for happiness in vain. 
Then speak, Sparta ! and demand my life ; 
My heart, exulting, answers to thy call, 
And smiles on glorious fate. To live with fame 
The gods allow to many ; but to die 
With equal lustre is a blessing Heaven 
Selects from all the choicest boons of fate, 
And with a sparing hand on few bestows." 
Salvation thus to Sparta he proclaimed. 
Joy, wrapped awhile in admiration, paused 
Suspending praise ; nor praise at last resounds 
In high acclaim to rend the arch of Heaven ; 
A reverential murmur breathes applause. 



ANNABEL LEE. — Edgar A. Poe. 

IT was many and many a year ago, 
In a kingdom by the sea, 
That a maiden there lived whom you may know 

By the name of Annabel Lee. 
And this maiden she lived with no other thought 
Than to love and be loved by me. 



118 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

I was a child and she was a child, 

In this kingdom by the sea ; 
But we loved with a love that was more than love, 

I and my Annabel Lee ; 
With a love that the winged seraphs of heaven 

Coveted her and me. 

And this was the reason that, long ago, 

In this kingdom by the sea, 
A wind blew out of a cloud, chilling 

My beautiful Annabel Lee ; 
So that her high-born kinsmen came 

And bore her away from me, 
To shut her up in a sepulchre 

In this kingdom by the sea. 

Our love it was stronger by far than the love 

Of those who were older than we, 

Of many far wiser than we ; 
And neither the angels in heaven above, 

Nor the demons down under the sea, 
Can ever dissever my soul from the soul 

Of the beautiful Annabel Lee. 

For the moon never beams without bringing me dreams 

Of this beautiful Annabel Lee ; 
And the stars never rise but I feel the bright eyes 

Of the beautiful Annabel Lee : 
And so all the night-tide I lie down by the side 
Of my darling, my darling, my life and my bride, 

In the sepulchre there by the sea, 

In her tomb by the sounding sea. 



BOY LOST. 119 



BOY LOST. 

HE had black eyes, with long lashes, red cheeks, and hair 
almost black and almost curly. He wore a crimson 
plaid jacket, with full trousers buttoned on ; had a habit of 
whistling, and liked to ask questions ; was accompanied by a 
small black dog. It is a long while now since he disappeared. 
I have a very pleasant house and much company. My guests 
say, " Ah ! it is pleasant here ! Everything has such an 
orderly, put-away look, — nothing about under foot, no 
dirt ! " 

But my eyes are aching for the sight of whittlings and cut 
paper upon the floor, of tumble-down card-houses, of wooden 
sheep and cattle, of pop-guns, bows and arrows, whips, tops, 
go-carts, blocks, and trumpery. I want to see boats a-rigging, 
and kites a-making, crumbles on the carpet, and paste spilt on 
the kitchen-table. I want to see the chairs and tables turned 
the wrong way about. I want to see candy-making and corn- 
popping, and to find jack-knives and fish-hooks among my 
muslins. Yet these things used to fret me once. 

They say, " How quiet you are here ! Ah ! one here may 
settle his brains and be at peace." But my ears are aching 
for the pattering of little feet, for a hearty shout, a shrill 
whistle, a gay tra-la-la, for the crack of little whips, for the 
noise of drums, fifes, and tin trumpets ; yet these things made 
me nervous once. 

They say, "Ah! you have leisure, — nothing to disturb 
you ; what heaps of sewing you have time for ! " But I long 
to be asked for a bit of string or an old newspaper, for a cent 
to buy a slate-pencil or peanuts. I want to be coaxed for a 
piece of new cloth for jibs or main-sails, and then to hem the 
same. I want to make little flags, and bags to hold marbles. 
I want to be followed by little feet all over the house, teasing 
for a bit of dough, for a little cake, or to bake a pie in a sau- 
cer. Yet these things used to fidget me once. 

They say, " Ah ! you are not tied at home ! How delight- 



120 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

ful to be always at liberty to go to concerts, lectures, and 
parties ! No confinement for you." 

But I want confinement. I want to listen for the school- 
bell mornings, to give the last hasty wash and brush, and 
then to watch from the window nimble feet bounding to 
school. I want frequent rents to mend, and to replace 
lost buttons. I want to obliterate mud-stains, fruit-stains, 
molasses-stains, and paints of all colors. I want to be sitting 
by a little crib of evenings, when weary feet are at rest, and 
prattling voices are hushed that mothers may sing their lulla- 
bys, and tell over the oft-repeated stories. They don't know 
their happiness then, — those mothers. I did n't. All these 
things I called confinement once. 

A manly figure stands before me now. He is taller than 
I, has thick black whiskers, and wears a frock-coat, bosomed 
shirt, and cravat. He has just come from college. He brings 
Latin and Greek in his countenance, and busts of the old 
philosophers for the sitting-room. He calls me mother, but 
I am rather unwilling to own him. 

He stoutly declares that he is my boy, and says that he 
will prove it. He brings me a small pair of white trousers, 
with gay stripes at the sides, and asks if I did n't make 
them for him when he joined the boys' militia. He says he 
is the very boy, too, that made the bonfire near the barn, so 
that we came very near having a fire in earnest. I see it all. 
My little boy is lost. 0, I wish he were a little tired boy, 
in a long white nightgown, lying in his crib, with me sitting 
by, holding his hand in mine, pushing the curls back from his 
forehead, watching his eyelids droop, and listening to his deep 
breathing ! 

If I only had my little boy again, how patient I would be ! 
How much I would bear, and how little I would fret and 
scold ! I can never have him back again ; but there are still 
many mothers who have n't yet lost their little boys. I won- 
der if they know they are living their very best days ; that 
now is the time to really enjoy their children. 



BORRIOBOOLA GHA. 121 



BORRIOBOOLA GHA. — 0. Goodrich. 

A STRANGER preached last Sunday, 
And crowds of people came 
To hear a two hours' sermon 

On a theme I scarce can name ; 
'T was all about some heathen, 

Thousands of miles afar, 
Who live in a land of darkness, 
Called Borrioboola Gha. 

So well their wants he pictured, 

That when the box was passed, 
Each listener felt his pocket, 

And goodly sums were cast ; 
For all must lend a shoulder 

To push the rolling car 
That carries light and comfort 

To Borrioboola Gha. 

That night their wants and sorrows 

Lay heavy on my soul, 
And deep in meditation, 

I took my morning stroll, 
When something caught my mantle 

With eager grasp and wild ; 
And, looking down in wonder, 

I saw a little child, — 

A pale and puny creature, 

In rags and dirt forlorn : 
" What do you want 1 " I asked her, 

Impatient to be gone ; 
With trembling voice she answered, 

" We live just down the street, 
And mamma, she 's a-dying, 

And we 've nothing left to eat." 



122 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Down in a dark, damp cellar, 

With mould o'er all the walls, 
Through whose half-buried windows 

God's sunlight never falls ; 
Where cold and want and hunger 

Crouched near her as she lay, 
I found that poor child's mother, 

Gasping her life away. 

A chair, a broken table, 

A bed of mouldy straw, 
A hearth all dark and firelesa ; 

But these I scarcely saw, 
For the mournful sight before me, 

So sad and sickening, — 0, 
I had never, never pictured 

A scene so full of woe ! 

The famished and the naked, 

The babe that pined for bread, 
The squalid group that huddled 

Around that dying bed ; 
All this distress and sorrow 

Should be in lands afar ; 
Was I suddenly transported 

To Borrioboola Gha 1 

Ah no ! the poor and wretched 

Were close beside my door, 
And I had passed them heedless 

A thousand times before : 
Alas, for the cold and hungry 

That met me every day, 
While all my tears were given 

To the suffering far away ! 

There 's work enough for Christians, 
In distant lands, we know, 



THE OLD APPLE-WOMAN. 123 

Our Lord commands his servants 

Through all the world to go, 
Not only to the heathen j 

This was his command to them : 
" Go, preach the Word, beginning 

Here, at Jerusalem." 

Christian, God has promised 

Whoe'er to such has given 
A cup of pure, cold water 

Shall find reward in heaven. 
Would you secure this blessing 1 

You need not seek it far ; 
Go find in yonder hovel 

A Borrioboola Gha. 



THE OLD APPLE-WOMAN. 

ONCE she was fair as thou ; 
Had ringlets on her brow ; 
Do not despise her now, — 
Not now. 

She sitteth in the cold ; 
She seemeth very old ; 
Be not to her too bold, — 
Too bold. 

She sitteth in the heat ; 
In the hot and jostling street ; 
She never seems to eat, — 
To eat. 

From earliest morning light 
To the dim shades of the night, 
A patient, weary sight, — 
Weary sight. 



124 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

No one e'er comes to greet, 
As she sits on the street ; 
Sits ever o'er her feet, — 
Her feet. 

Yet all do pass that way, — 
The young, old, grave, and gay ; 
Yet no one goes to say 
Good day. 

She looketh on her stand ; 
She wipes it with her hand, — 
Wipes apples, dust, and sand 
With her hand. 

You stop and ask the way : 
" One cent," you hear her say ; 
Naught else she saith all day, — - 
All day. 

The crowd it ebbs and flows, 
Each season comes and goes ; 
The only " change " she knows, 
One cent. 

No one e'er calls the name 
Of that aged, crooning dame ; 
None knoweth whence she came, • 
She came. 

Yet she hath been a bride ; 
Stood by a mother's side ; 
Was once a husband's pride, — 
His pride. 

She had a home as thou ; " 
Gone are both fruit and bough ; 



THE VAGABONDS. 125 

Deal gently with her now, — 
Gently now. 

One home ye both shall have ; 
One hope beyond the grave ; 
One faith ye both shall save, — 
Shall save. 



THE VAGABONDS. — J. T. Trowbridge. 

WE are two travellers, Roger and I. 
Roger 's my dog. — Come here, you scamp ! 
Jump for the gentlemen, — mind your eye I 

Over the table, — look out for the lamp ! — 
The rogue is growing a little old ; 

Five years we 've tramped through wind and weather, 
And slept out doors when nights were cold, 
And ate and drank — and starved — together. 

We 've learned what comfort is, I tell you ! 

A bed on the floor, a bit of rosin, 
A fire to thaw our thumbs, (poor fellow ! 

The paw he holds up there 's been frozen,) 
Plenty of catgut for my fiddle, 

(This out-door business is bad for strings,) 
Then a few nice buckwheats hot from the griddle, 

And Roger and I set up for kings ! 

No, thank ye, sir, — I never drink ; 

Roger and I are exceedingly moral, — 
Are n't we, Roger 1 — See him wink ! — 

Well, something hot, then, — we won't quarrel. 
He 's thirsty, too, — see him nod his head ? 

What a pity, sir, that dogs can't talk ! 
He understands every word that 's said, — 

And he knows good milk from water-and-chalk. 



126 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

The truth is, sir, now T reflect, 

I 've been so sadly given to grog, 
I wonder I 've not lost the respect 

(Here 's to you, sir !) even of my dog. 
But he sticks by, through thick and thin ; 

And this old coat, with its empty pockets, 
And rags that smell of tobacco and gin, 

He '11 follow while he has eyes in his sockets. 

There is n't another creature living 

Would do it, and prove, through every disaster, 
So fond, so faithful, and so forgiving, 

To such a miserable thankless master ! 
No, sir ! — see him wag his tail and grin ! 

By George ! it makes my old eyes water ! 
That is, there 's something in this gin 

That chokes a fellow. But no matter ! 

We '11 have some music, if you 're willing, 

And Roger (hem ! what a plague a cough is, sir !) 
Shall march a little. — Start, you villain ! 

Stand straight J 'Bout face ! Salute your officer 1 
Put up that paw ! Dress ! Take your rifle ! 

(Some dogs have arms, you see !) Now hold your 
Cap while the gentleman gives a trifle, 

To aid a poor old patriot soldier ! 

March ! Halt ! Now show how the rebel shakes, 

When he stands up to hear his sentence. 
Now tell us how many drams it takes 

To honor a jolly new acquaintance. 
Five yelps, — that 's five ; he 's mighty knowing I 

The night 's before us, fill the glasses ! — 
Quick, sir ! I 'm ill, — my brain is going ! — 

Some brandy, — thank you, — there ! — it passes ! 

Why not reform 1 That 's easily said ; 

But I 've gone through such wretched treatment, 



THE VAGABONDS. 127 

Sometimes forgetting the taste of bread, 
And scarce remembering what meat meant, 

That my poor stomach 's past reform ; 

And there are times when, mad with thinking, 

I 'd sell out heaven for something warm 
To prop a horrible inward sinking. 

Is there a way to forget to think 1 

At your age, sir, home, fortune, friends, 
A dear girl's love, — but I took to drink ; — 

The same old story ; you know how it enda. 
If you could have seen these classic features, — • 

You need n't laugh, sir ; they were not thea 
Such a burning libel on God's creatures : 

I was one of your handsome men ! 

If you had seen her, so fair and young, 

Whose head was happy on this breast ! 
If you could have heard the songs I sung 

When the wine went round, you would n't have guessed 
That ever I, sir, should be straying 

From door to door, with fiddle and dog, 
Kagged and penniless, and playing 

To you to-night for a glass of grog ! 

She 's married since, — a parson's wife : 

'T was better for her that we should part, — 
Better the soberest, prosiest life 

Than a blasted home and a broken heart. 
I have seen her 1 Once : I was weak and spent 

On the dusty road : a carriage stopped : 
But little she dreamed, as on she went, 

Who kissed the coin that her fingers dropped I 

You 've set me talking, sir ; I 'm sorry ; 

It makes me wild to think of the change ! 
What do you care for a beggar's story ? 

Is it amusing 1 you find it strange 1 



128 



PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 



I had a mother so proud of me ! 

'T was well she died before — Do you know 
If the happy spirits in heaven can see 

The ruin and wretchedness here below 1 

Another glass, and strong, to deaden 

This pain ; then Roger and I will start. 
I wonder, has he such a lumpish, leaden, 

Aching thing, in place of a heart ] 
He is sad sometimes, and would weep, if he could, 

No doubt, remembering things that were, — 
A virtuous kennel, with plenty of food, 

And himself a sober, respectable cur. 

I 'm better now ; that glass was warming. — 

You rascal ! limber your lazy feet ! 
We must be fiddling and performing 

For supper and bed, or starve in the street. — 
Not a very gay life to lead, you think 1 

But soon we shall go where lodgings are free, 
And the sleepers need neither victuals nor drink ;- 

The sooner, the better for Roger and me ! 



OUTWARD BOUND.— William Allingham. 



CLINK — clink — clink ! goes our windlass. 
" Ahoy ! " — " Haul in ! " — " Let go ! " 
Yards braced and sails set, — 

Flags uncurl and flow. 
Some eyes that watch from shore are wet, 

(How bright their welcome shone !) 
While, bending softly to the breeze, 
And rushiug through the parted seas, 
Our gallant ship glides on. 



DIGGING FOR HIDDEN TREASURE. 129 

Though one has left a sweetheart, 

And one has left a wife, 
'T will never do to mope and fret, 

Or curse a sailors life. 
See, far away they signal yet, — 

They dwindle, — fade, — they 're gone ! 
For, dashing outwards, bold and brave, 
And springing light from wave to wave, 

Our merry ship flies on. 

Gay spreads the sparkling ocean ; 

But many a gloomy night 
And stormy morrow must be met 

Ere next we heave in sight. 
The parting look we '11 ne'er forget, 

The kiss, the benison, 
As round the rolling world we go. 
God bless you all ! — Blow, breezes, blow ! — 

Sail on, good ship, sail on ! 



DIGGING FOR HIDDEN TREASURE.— Chakles Reade. 

" "TV yT~Y lad, I should like to tell you a story, but I suppose 
-i-VJ_ I shall make a bungle of it ; sha' n't cut the furrow 
clean, I 'm doubtful." 

" Never mind ; try ! " 

" Well then. Once upon a time there was an old chap 
that had heard or read about treasures being found in odd 
places, — a pot full of guineas, or something, — and it took 
root in his heart, till nothing would serve him but he must 
find a pot of guineas too. He used to poke about all the old 
ruins, grubbing away, and would have taken up the floor 
of the church, but the church-wardens would not have it. 
One morning he comes down and says to his wife, ' It is all 
right, old woman ; I 've found the treasure.' 

6* i 



130 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

w ' No ! have you though ? ' says she. 

" ' Yes ! ' says he ; ' leastways it is as good as found ; it is 
only waiting till I 've had my breakfast, and then I '11 go out 
and fetch it in.' 

" ' La, John, but how did you find it ? ' 

" ' It was revealed to me in a dream,' says he, as grave as a 
judge. 

" ' And where is it 7 ' asks the old woman. 

" ' Under a tree in our own orchard, — no farther,' says he. 

" ■ John ! how long you are at breakfast to-day ! ' 

" Up they both got, and into the orchard. 

" ' Now, which tree is it under 1 ' 

" John, he scratches his head. ' Blest if I know/ 

" ' Why, you old ninny,' says the mistress, ' did n't you 
take the trouble to notice 1 ' 

" ' That I did,' said he ; ' 1 saw plain enough which tree it 
was in my dream, but now they muddle it all, there are so 
many of 'em.' 

" ' Drat your stupid old head ! ■ says she ; ■ why did n't 
you put a nick on the right one at the time % ' 

" ' Well,' says he, ' I must dig till I find the right one.' 

" The wife she loses heart at this ; for there were eighty 
apple-trees and a score of cherry-trees. ' Mind you don't cut 
the roots,' says she, and she heaves a sigh. 

"John, he gives them bad language, root and branch. 
1 What signifies cut or not cut ! the old fagots, they don't 
bear me a bushel of fruit, the whole lot. They used to 
bear two sacks apiece in father's time. Drat 'em ! ' 

" ' Well, John,' says the old woman, smoothing him down, 
' father used to give them a deal of attention.' 

" l 'T ain't that ! 't ain't that ! ' says he, quick and spite- 
ful-like ; ' they have got old like ourselves, and good for fire 
wood.' 

"Out pickaxe and spade, and digs three feet deep round 
one, and, finding nothing but mould, goes at another, makes 
a little mound all round him too, — no guinea-pot. 

" Well, the village let him dig three or four quiet enough ; 



DIGGING FOR HIDDEN TREASURE* 131 

but after that curiosity was awakened^ and while John was 
digging, and that was all day, there was mostly seven or 
eight watching through the fence and passing their jests. 
After a bit, a fashion came up of flinging a stone or two at 
John ; then John, he brought out his gun loaded with dust- 
shot along with his pick and spade, and the first stone 
came he fired sharp in that direction, and then loaded again. 
So they took that hint, and John dug on in peace till about 
the fourth Sunday, and then the parson had a slap at him 
in church. 'Folks were not to heap up to themselves 
treasures on earth,' was all his discourse. 

" But it seemed he was only heaping up mould ; for when 
he had dug the five-score holes, no pot of gold came to light. 
Then the neighbors called the orchard Jacobs's Folly ; his 
name was Jacobs, — John Jacobs. 

" ' Now then, wife,' says he, ' suppose you and I look 
out for another village to live in, for their gibes are more 
than I can bear.' 

" Old woman begins to cry. ■ Been here so long, — brought 
me home here, John, when we were first married, John, and 
I wa? a comely lass, and you the smartest young man I ever 
saw, to my fancy anyway ; could n't sleep or eat my victuals 
in any house but this. 1 

" 'Oh ! could n't ye ? "Well, then, we must stay ; perhaps 
it will blow over.' 

"'Like everything else, John; but, dear John, do ye fill 
in those holes ; the young folk come far and wide on Sundays 
to see them.' 

" 'Wife, I have n't the heart,' says he. 'You see, when 
I was digging for the treasure I was always a going to find, 
it kept my heart up ; but take out a shovel and fill them in, 
— I 'd as lief dine off white of egg on a Sunday.' 

" So for six blessed months the heaps were out in the heat 
and frost till the end of February, and then when the weather 
broke, the old man takes heart and fills them in, and the 
village soon forgot ' Jacobs's Folly ' because it was out of 
sight. 



132 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

" Comes April, and out burst the trees. ' Wife,' says he, 
' our bloom is richer than I 've known it this many a year ; 
it is richer than our neighbors'.' Bloom dies, and then 
out come about a million little green things quite hard. 

" Michaelmas Day the old trees were staggering, and 
the branches down to the ground with the crop; thirty 
shillings on every tree one with another ; and so on for the 
next year, and the next; sometimes more, sometimes less, 
according to the year. Trees were old and wanted a change. 
His letting in the air to them and turning the subsoil up 
to the frost and sun had renewed their youth. So by that 
he learned that tillage is the way to get treasure from 
the earth. Men are ungrateful at times, but the soil is 
never ungrateful ; it always makes a return for the pains 
we give it." 



THE OLD SERGEANT. — Forcetthe Willson. 
January 1, 1863. 

THE carrier cannot sing to-day the ballads 
With which he used to go, 
Rhyming the glad rounds of the happy New Years 
That are now beneath the snow. 

For the same awful and portentous shadow 

That overcast the earth, 
And smote the land last year with desolation, 

Still darkens every hearth. 

And the carrier hears Beethoven's mighty death-march 

Come up from every mart ; 
And he hears and feels it breathing in his bosom, 

And beating in his heart. 

And to-day, a scarred and weather-beaten veteran, 
Again he comes along, 



THE OLD SERGEANT. 133 

To tell the story of the Old Year's struggles 
In another New Year's song. 

And the song is his, but not so with the story, 

For the story, you must know, 
Was told in prose to Assistant Surgeon Austin, 

By a soldier of Shiloh. 

By Robert Burton, who was brought up on the Adams, 

With his death-wound in his side ; 
And who told the story to the assistant surgeon 

On the same night that he died. 

But the singer feels it will better suit the ballad, 

If all should deem it right, 
To tell the story as if what it speaks of 

Had happened but last night. 

" Come a little nearer, doctor, — thank you, — let me take 

the cup ; 
Draw your chair up, — draw it closer, — just another little 

sup! 
Maybe you may think I 'm better ; but I 'm pretty well 

used up, — 
Doctor, you 've done all you could do, but I 'm just a going up ! 

" Feel my pulse, sir, if you want to, but it ain't much use to 

try — " 
" Never say that," said the surgeon, as he smothered down a 



y 

" It will never do, old comrade, for a soldier to say die ! " 
"What you say will make no difference, doctor, when you 
come to die." 

" Doctor, what has been the matter 1 " " You were very 

faint, they say ; 
You must try to get some sleep now." "Doctor, have I 

been away 1 " 



134 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

" Not that anybody knows of ! " " Doctor, — doctor, please 

to stay ! 
There is something I must tell you, and you won't have long 

to stay ! 

" I have got my marching orders, and I 'm ready now to go ; 
Doctor, did you say I fainted 1 — but it could n't ha' been 

so, — 
For as sure asl'ma sergeant, and was wounded at Shiloh, 
I 've this very night been back there, on the old field of 

Shiloh ! 

" This is all that I remember ! The last time the lighter 

came, 
And the lights had all been lowered, and the noises much the 

same, 
He had not been gone five minutes before something called 

my name : 
1 Orderly Sergeant — Robert Burton ! ' just that way it 

called my name. 

"And I wondered who could call me so distinctly and so 

slow, 
Knew it could n't be the lighter, — he could not have spoken 

so, — 
And I tried to answer, ' Here, sir ! ' but I could n't make it go ! 
For I could n't move a muscle, and I could n't make it go ! 

" Then I thought : * It 's all a nightmare, all a humbug and 

a bore ; 
Just another foolish grape-vine, — and it won't come any 

more ' ; 
But it came, sir, notwithstanding, just the same way as 

before : 
' Orderly Sergeant — Robert Burton ! ' even plainer than 

before. 



THE OLD SERGEANT. 135 

u That is all that I remember, till a sudden burst of light, 
And I stood beside the river, where we stood that Sunday 

night, 
Waiting to be ferried over to the dark bluffs opposite, 
When the river was perdition and all hell was opposite J 

" And the same old palpitation came again in all its power, 
And I heard a bugle sounding, as from some celestial tower ; 
And the same mysterious voice said : ' It is the eleventh 

hour ! 
Orderly Sergeant — Robert Burton, — it is the eleventh 

hour ! ' 

" Doctor Austin ! what day is this 1 " " It is Wednesday 

night, you know." 
" Yes, — to-morrow will be New Year's, and a right good 

time below ! 
What time is it, Doctor Austin 1 " " Nearly twelve." " Then 

don't you go ! 
Can it be that all this happened — all this — not an hour 

ago? 

" There was where the gunboats opened on the dark rebel- 
lious host ; 

And where Webster semicircled his last guns upon the coast ; 

There were still the two log-houses, just the same, or else 
their ghost, — 

Aud the same old transport came and took me over, — or its 
ghost ! 

" And the old field lay before me all deserted far and wide ; 
There was where they fell on Prentiss, — there McClernand 

met the tide ; 
There was where stern Sherman rallied, and where Hurlbut's 

heroes died, — 
Lower down where Wallace charged them, and kept charging 

till he died. 



136 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

"* There was where Lew Wallace showed them he was of the 

canny kin, 
There was where old Nelson thundered, and where Rousseau 

waded in ; 
There McCook sent 'em. to breakfast, and we all began to win, — 
There was where the grape-shot took me, just as we began to 

win. 

"Now a shroud of snow and silence over everything was 

spread ; 
And but for this old blue mantle and the old hat on my head, 
I should not have even doubted, to this moment, I was dead, — 
For my footsteps were as silent as the snow upon the dead ! 

" Death and silence ! — death and silence ! all around me as 

I sped ! 
And behold a mighty tower, as if builded to the dead, 
To the heaven of the heavens, lifted up its mighty head, 
Till the stars and stripes of heaven all seemed waving from 

its head ! 

" Round and mighty-based it towered, — up into the infi- 
nite, — 

And I knew no mortal mason could have built a shaft so 
bright ; 

For it shone like solid sunshine ; and a winding stair of 
light 

Wound around it and around it till it wound clear out of 
sight ! 

"And, behold, as I approached it, with a rapt and dazzled 

stare, — 
Thinking that I saw old comrades just ascending the great 

stair, — 
Suddenly the solemn challenge broke of — 'Halt, and who 

goes there 1 ' 
'I'ma friend,' I said, 'if you are.' 'Then advance, sir, to 

the stair ! ' 



THE OLD SERGEANT. 137 

"I advanced! — That sentry, doctor, was Elijah Ballan- 

tyne ! — 
First of all to fall on Monday, after we had formed the 

line ! — 
' Welcome, my old sergeant, welcome ! Welcome by that 

countersign ! ' 
And he pointed to the scar there, under this old cloak of 

mine ! 

" As he grasped my hand, I shuddered, thinking only of the 
grave; 

But he smiled and pointed upward with a bright and blood- 
less glaive ; 

'That's the way, sir, to head-quarters.' 'What head-quar- 
ters V 'Of the brave.' 

4 But the great tower 1 ' ' That, ' he answered, ' is the way, 
sir, of the brave ! ' 

". Then a sudden shame came o'er me at his uniform of light ; 

At my own so old and tattered, and at his so new and bright. 

' Ah ! said he, ' you have forgotten the new uniform to- 
night, — 

Hurry back, for you must be here at just twelve o'clock to- 
night ! ' 

"And the next thing I remember, you were sitting there, 

and I — 
Doctor, — did you hear a footstep] Hark ! — God bless you 

aU ! Good by ! 
Doctor, please to give my musket and my knapsack, when I 

die, 
To my son — my son that 's coming, — he won't get here till 

I die ! 

" Tell him his old father blessed him as he never did 

before, — 
And to carry that old musket — " Hark ! a knock is at the 

door — 



138 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

" Till the Union — " See ! it opens ! — " Father ! Father \ 

speak once more ! " — 
" Bless you ! " gasped the old gray sergeant, and he lay and 

said no more ! 



LITTLE GOLDENHAIR. 

aOLDENHAIR climbed up on grandpapa's knee ; 
Dear little Goldenhair, tired was she, 
All the day busy as busy could be. 

Up in the morning as soon as 't was light, 
Out with the birds and butterflies bright, 
Skipping about till the coming of night. 

Grandpapa toyed with the curls on her head. 
" What has my darling been doing," he said, 
"Since she rose with the sun from her bed ] " 

" Pitty much," answered the sweet little one. 
" I cannot tell so much things I have done, 
Played with my dolly and feeded my bun. 

" And then I jumped with my little jump-rope, 
And I made out of some water and soap 
Bootiful worlds, mamma's castles of hope. 

" Then I have readed in my picture-book, 

And Bella and I, we went to look 

For the smooth little stones by the side of the brook. 

" And then I corned home and eated my tea, 
And I climbed up on grandpapas knee, 
And I jes as tired as tired can be." 



HOW 'S MY BOY ? 139 

Lower and lower the little head pressed, 
Until it had dropped upon grandpapa's breast ; 
Dear little Goldenhair, sweet be thy rest ! 

We are but children ; things that we do 
Are as sports of a babe to the Infinite view, 
That marks all our weakness, and pities it too. 

God grant that when night overshadows our way, 
And we shall be called to account for our day, 
He shall find us as guileless as Goldenhair's lay. 

And 0, when aweary, may we be so blest, 
And sink like the innocent child to our rest, 
And feel ourselves clasped to the Infinite breast I 



HOW'S MY BOY] — S. Dobell. 

HO, sailor of the sea ! 
How 's my boy — my boy 1 
" What 's your boy's name, good wife, 
And in what good ship sailed he 1 " 

My boy John, — 

He that went to sea, — 

What care I for the ship, sailor 3 

My boy 's my boy to me. 

You come back from sea, 

And not know my John 1 

I might as well have asked some landsman 

Yonder down in the town. 

There 's not a dolt in all the parish 

But he knows my John. 



140 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

How 's my boy — my boy "? 
And unless you let me know, 
I '11 swear you are no sailor, 
Blue jacket or no, 
Brass button or no, sailor, 
Anchor and crown or no ! 
Sure his ship was the Jolly Briton — 
" Speak low, woman, speak low ! " 

And why should I speak low, sailor, 
About my own boy John 1 
If I was loud as I am proud 
. I'd sing him over the town ! 
Why should I speak low, sailor, 
" That good ship went down." 

How 's my boy — my boy ? 

What care I for the ship, sailor, 

I never was aboard her. 

Be she afloat, or be she aground, 

Sinking or swimming, I 11 be bound 

Her owners can afford her ! 

I say how 's my John ] 

" Every man on board went down, 

Every man aboard her." 

How 's my boy — my boy 1 
What care I for the men, sailor ? 
I 'm not their mother, — 
How 's my boy — my boy 1 
Tell me of him and no other ] 
How 's my boy — my boy 1 



JOHN VALJOHN AND THE SAVOYARD. 141 



JOHN VALJOHN AND THE SAVOYARD. 

Victor Hugo. 

AS the sun was sinking towards the horizon, John Val- 
john, a convict lately released from the galleys, was 
seated behind a thicket in a large barren plain. There was 
no horizon but the Alps. Not even the steeple of a village 
church. It might have been three leagues from the city. A 
by-path, which crossed the plain, passed a few steps from the 
thicket. 

In the midst of his meditation, which would have height- 
ened not a little the frightful effect of his rags to any one 
who might have met him, he heard a joyous sound. He 
turned his head, and saw coming along the path a little 
Savoyard, a dozen years old, singing, with his hurdy-gurdy at 
his side, and his marmot on his back ; — one of those pleasant 
and gay youngsters who go from place to place, with their 
knees sticking through their trousers. 

Always singing, the boy stopped from time to time, and 
played at tossing up some pieces of money that he had 
in his hand, probably his whole fortune. Among them there 
was one forty-sous piece. 

The boy stopped by the side of the thicket without seeing 
John Valjohn, and tossed up his handful of sous. Until this 
time he had skilfully caught the whole of them upon the back 
of his hand. This time the forty-sous piece escaped him, and 
rolled towards the thicket near John Valjohn. 

John Valjohn put his foot upon it. 

The boy, however, had followed the piece with his eye^ 
and had seen where it went. He was not frightened, and 
walked straight to the man. 

It was an entirely solitary place. Far as the eye could 
reach, there was no one on the plain or in the path. Noth- 
ing could be heard but the faint cries of a flock of birds 
of passage, that were flying across the sky at an immense 
height. The child turned his back to the sun, which mad© 



142 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

his hair like threads of gold, and flushed the savage face of 
John Valjohn with a lurid glow. 

" Mister," said the little Savoyard, with that childish con- 
fidence which is made up of ignorance and innocence, "my 
piece 1 " 

" What is your name % " said John Valjohn. 

" Little Gervais, mister." 

" Get out ! " said John Valjohn. 

" Mister," continued the boy, " give me my piece." 

John Valjohn dropped his head and did not answer. 

The child began again : " My piece, mister ! " 

John Valjohn's eye remained fixed on the ground. 

"My piece!" exclaimed the boy, "my white piece! my 
silver ! " 

John Valjohn did not appear to understand. The boy 
took him by the collar of his blouse and shook him. And at 
the same time he made an effort to move the big, iron-soled 
shoe which was placed upon his treasure. 

" I want my piece ! my forty-sous piece ! " 

The child began to cry. John Valjohn raised his head. 
He still kept his seat. His look was troubled. He looked 
upon the boy with an air of wonder, then reached out his 
hand towards his stick, and exclaimed in a terrible voice, 
"Who is there?" 

" Me, mister," answered the boy. " Little Gervais ! me ! 
me ! give me my forty-sous, if you please ! Take away your 
foot, mister, if you please ! " Then becoming angry, small as 
he was, and almost threatening, — 

" Come, now, will you take away your foot 1 Why don't 
you take away your foot *? " 

" Ah ! you here yet ! " said John Valjohn ; and, rising 
hastily to his feet, without releasing the piece .of money, he 
added, " You 'd better take care of yourself ! " 

The boy looked at him in terror, then began to tremble 
from head to foot, and after a few seconds of stupor, took to 
flight and ran with all his might, without daring to turn his 
head, or to utter a cry. 



JOHN VALJOHN AND THE SAVOYAKD. 143 

At A little distance, however, he stopped fbr want of breath, 
and John Valjohn, in his revery, heard him sobbing. 

In a few minutes the boy was gone. 

The sun had gone down. 

The shadows were deepening around John Valjohn. He 
had not eaten during the day ; probably he had some fever. 

He had remained standing, and had not changed his attlL 
tude since the child fled. His breathing was at long and 
unequal intervals. His eyes were fixed on a spot ten or 
twelve steps before him, and seemed to be studying with 
profound attention the form of an old piece of blue crockery 
that was lying in the grass. All at once he shivered ; he 
began to feel the cold night air. 

He pulled his cap down over his forehead, sought mechani- 
cally to fold and button his blouse around him, stepped for- 
ward and stooped to pick up his stick. 

At that instant he perceived the forty-sous piece which 
his foot had half buried in the ground, and which glistened 
among the pebbles. It was like an electric shock. " What 
is that 1 " said he, between his teeth. He drew back a step 
or two, then stopped, without the power to withdraw his gaze 
from this point which bis foot had covered the instant before, 
as if the thing that glistened there in the obscurity had been 
an open eye fixed upon him. 

After a few minutes he sprang convulsively towards the 
piece of money, seized it, and, rising, looked away over the 
plain, straining his eyes towards all points of the horizon, 
standing and trembling like a frightened deer which is 
seeking a place of refuge. 

He saw nothing. Night was falling, the plain was cold and 
bare, thick purple mists were rising in the glimmering twilight. 

He said, " Oh ! " and began to walk rapidly in the direc- 
tion in which the child had gone. After some thirty steps 
he stopped, looked about, and saw nothing. 

Then he called with all his might, " Little Gervais ! Little 
Gervais ! " He listened. There was no answer. 

The country was desolate and gloomy. On all sides was 



144 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS 

space. There was nothing about him but a shadow in which 
his gaze was lost, and a silence in which his voice was lost. 

A biting norther was blowing, which gave a kind of dismal 
life to everything about him. The bushes shook their little 
thin arms with an incredible fury. One would have said that 
they were threatening and pursuing somebody. 

He began to walk again, then quickened his pace to a run, 
and from time to time stopped and called out in that soli- 
tude, in a most desolate and terrible voice : " Little Gervais ! 
Little Gervais ! " 

Surely, if the child had heard him, he would have been 
frightened, and would have hid himself. But doubtless the 
boy was already far away. 

He met a priest on horseback. He went up to him and 
said : " Mr. Curate, have you seen a child go by % " 

" No," said the priest. 

" Little Gervais was his name 1 " 

" I have seen nobody." 

He took two five-franc pieces from his bag and gave them 
to the priest. 

"Mr. Curate, this is for your poor. Mr. Curate, he is a 
little fellow, about ten years old, with a marmot, I think, and 
a hurdy-gurdy. He went this way. One of these Savoyards, 
you know 1 " 

" I have not seen him." 

"Little Gervais 1 ? Is his village near here 1 ? Can you tell 
me?" 

"If it be as you say, my friend, the little fellow is a 
foreigner. They roam about this country. Nobody knows 
them." 

John Valjohn hastily took out two more five-franc pieces, 
and gave them to the priest. " For your poor," said he. 

Then he added wildly : " Mr. Abbe, have me arrested ; I 
am a robber." 

The priest put spurs to his horse, and fled in great fear. 

John Valjohn began to run again in the direction which he 
had first taken. 



SHAMUS O'BRIEN. 145 

He went on in this wise for a considerable distance, looking 
around, calling and shouting, but met nobody else. Two or 
three times he left the path to look at what seemed to be 
somebody lying down or crouching ; it was only low bushes 
or rocks. 

Finally, at a place where three paths met, he stopped. 
The moon had risen. He strained his eyes in the dis- 
tance, and called out once more, " Little Gervais ! Little 
Gervais ! Little Gervais ! " His cries died away into the 
mist, without even awakening an echo. Again he mur- 
mured, " Little Gervais ! " but with a feeble and almost 
inarticulate voice. 

That was his last effort ; his knees suddenly bent under 
him, as if an invisible power overwhelmed him at a blow, 
with the weight of his conscience. He fell exhausted upon a 
great stone, his hands clenched in his hair, and his face on 
his knees, and exclaimed, " What a wretch I am!" 

Then his heart swelled, and he burst into tears. It was 
the first time he had wept for nineteen years. 

How long did he weep thus 1 What did he do after weep- 
ing? Where did he go 1 Nobody ever knew. It is known 
simply that, on that very night, the stage-driver who drove 
at that time on the Grenoble route, and arrived at the city 
about three o'clock in the morning, saw, as he passed through 
a certain street, a man in the attitude of prayer, kneeling 
upon the pavement in the shadow, before the door of the 
Bishop's residence. 



SHAMUS O'BRIEN. — J. S. Le Fanu. 

J 1ST afther the war, in the year '98, 
As soon as the boys wor all scattered and bate, 
'T was the custom, whenever a pisant was got, 
To hang him by thrial — barrin' sich as was shot. 
There was trial by jury goin' on by daylight, 
And the martial-law hangin' the lavins by night. 



146 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

It 's them was hard times for an honest gossoon : 

If he missed in the judges — he ? d meet a dragoon ; 

An' whether the sodgers or judges gev sentence, 

The divil a much time they allowed for repentance. 

An' it 's many 's the fine boy was then on his keepin' 

Wid small share iv restin', or atin', or sleepin', 

An' because they loved Erin, an' scorned to sell it, 

A prey for the bloodhound, a mark for the bullet, — 

Unsheltered by night, and unrested by day, 

With the heath for their barrack, revenge for their pay ; 

An' the bravest an' hardiest boy iv them all 

Was Shamus O'Brien, from the town iv Glingall. 

His limbs were well set, an' his body was light, 

An' the keen-fanged hound had not teeth half so white ; 

But his face was as pale as the face of the dead, 

And his cheek never warmed with the blush of the red ; 

An' for all that he was n't an ugly young bye, 

For the divil himself could n't blaze with his eye, 

So droll an' so wicked, so dark and so bright, 

Like a fire-flash that crosses the depth of the night ! 

An' he was the best mower that ever has been, 

An' the illigantest hurler that ever was seen. 

An' his dancin' was sich that the men used to stare, 

An' the women turn crazy, he done it so quare ; 

An', by gorra, the whole world gev it into him there. 

An' it 's he was the boy that was hard to be caught, 

An' it 's often he run, an' it 's often he fought, 

An' it 's many the one can remember right well 

The quare things he done : an' it 's often I heerd tell 

How he lathered the yeomen, himself agin' four, 

An' stretched the two strongest on old Galtimore. 

But the fox must sleep sometimes, the wild deer must rest, 

An' treachery prey on the blood iv the best ; 

Afther many a brave action of power and pride, 

An' many a hard night on the mountain's bleak side. 

An' a thousand great dangers and toils overpast, 

In the darkness of night he was taken at last. 



SHAMUS O'BRIEN. 147 

Now, Shamus, look back on the beautiful moon, 

For the door of the prison must close on you soon, 

An' take your last look at her dim lovely light, 

That falls on the mountain and valley this night ; 

One look at the village, one look at the flood, 

An' one at the shelthering, far-distant wood ; 

Farewell to the forest, farewell to the hill, 

An' farewell to the friends that will think of you still ; 

Farewell to the pathern, the hurlin' an' wake, 

And farewell to the girl that would die for your sake. 

An' twelve sodgers brought him to Maryborough jail, 

An' the turnkey resaved him, refusin' all bail ; 

The fleet limbs wor chained, an' the sthrong hands wor bound, 

An' he laid down his length on the cowld prison ground, 

An' the dreams of his childhood kem over him there 

As gentle an' soft as the sweet summer air ; 

An' happy remembrances crowding on ever, 

As fast as the foam-flakes dhrift down on the river, 

Bringing fresh to his heart merry days long gone by, 

Till the tears gathered heavy and thick in his eye. 

But the tears did n't fall, for the pride of his heart 

Would not suffer one drop down his pale cheek to start ; 

An' he sprang to his feet in the dark prison cave, 

An' he swore with the fierceness that misery gave, 

By the hopes of the good, an' the cause of the brave, 

That when he was mouldering in the cold grave 

His enemies never should have it to boast 

His scorn of their vengeance one moment was lost ; 

His bosom might bleed, but his cheek should be dhry, 

For undaunted he lived, and undaunted he 'd die. 

Well, as soon as a few weeks was over and gone, 

The terrible day iv the thrial kem on ; 

There was slch a crowd there was scarce room to stand, 

An' sodgers on guard, an' dhragoons sword in hand ; 

An' the court-house so full that the people were bothered, 

An' attorneys an' criers on the point iv bein' smothered j 



148 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

An' counsellors almost gev over for dead, 

An' the jury sittin' up in their box overhead ; 

An' the judge settled out so detarmined an' big, 

With his gown on his back, and an illegant new wig ; 

An' silence was called, an' the minute it was said 

The court was as still as the heart of the dead, 

An' they heard but the openin' of one prison lock, 

An' Shamus O'Brien kem into the dock. 

For one minute he turned his eye round on the throng, 

An' he looked at the bars, so firm and so strong, 

An' he saw that he had not a hope nor a friend, 

A chance to escape, nor a word to defend ; 

An' he folded his arms as he stood there alone, 

As calm and as cold as a statue of stone ; 

And they read a big writin', a yard long at laste, 

An' Jim did n't understand it, nor mind it a taste ; 

An' the judge took a big pinch iv snuff, and he says, 

" Are you guilty or not, Jim O'Brien, av you plase 1 " 

An' all held their breath in the silence of dhread, 

An' Shamus O'Brien made answer and said : 

" My lord, if you ask me, if in my life-time 

I thought any treason, or did any crime 

That should call to my cheek, as I stand alone here, 

The hot blush of shame, or the coldness of fear, 

Though I stood by the grave to receive my death-blow, 

Before God and the world I would answer you, no ! 

But if you would ask me, as I think it like, 

If in the rebellion I carried a pike, 

An' fought for ould Ireland from the first to the close, 

An' shed the heart's blood of her bitterest foes, 

I answer you, yes ; and I tell you again, 

Though I stand here to perish, it 's my glory that then 

In her cause I was willing my veins should run dhry, 

An' that now for her sake I am ready to die." 

Then the silence was great, and the jury smiled bright, 
An' the judge was n't sorry the job was made light ; 



SHAMUS O'BRIEN 149 

By my sowl, it 's himself was the crabbed ould chap J 

In a twinklin' he pulled on his ugly black cap, 

Then Shamus' mother in the crowd standin' by, 

Called out to the judge with a pitiful cry : 

" judge ! darlin', don't, 0, don't say the word ! 

The crathur is young, have mercy, my lord ; 

He was foolish, he did n't know what he was doin ; 

You don't know him, my lord, — 0, don't give him to ruin / 

He 's the kindliest crathur, the tendherest-hearted ; 

Don't part us forever, we that 's so long parted. 

Judge, mavourneen, forgive him, forgive him, my lord, 

An' God will forgive you — 0, don't say the word ! " 

That was the first minute that O'Brien was shaken, 

When he saw that he was not quite forgot or forsaken ; 

An' down his pale cheeks, at the word of his mother, 

The big tears wor runnin' fast, one afther th' other ; 

An' two or three times he endeavored to spake, 

But the sthrong, manly voice used to falther and break ; 

But at last, by the strength of his high-mounting pride, 

He conquered and masthered his griefs swelling tide, 

" An', " says he, " mother, darlin', don't break your poor heart 

For, sooner or later, the dearest must part ; 

And God knows it 's betther than wandering in fear 

On the bleak, trackless mountain, among the wild deer, 

To lie in the grave, where the head, heart, and breast, 

From thought, labor, and sorrow forever shall rest. 

Then, mother, my darlin', don't cry any more, 

Don't make me seem broken, in this, my last hour ; 

For I wish, when my head 's lyin' undher the raven, 

No thrue man can say that I died like a craven ! " 

Then towards the judge Shamus bent down his head, 

An' that minute the solemn death-sentince was said. 

The mornin' was bright, an' the mists rose on high, 
An' the lark whistled merrily in the clear sky ; 
But why are the men standin' idle so late 1 
An' why do the crowds gather fast in the street 1 






150 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

What come they to talk of 1 what come they to see 1 

An' why does the long rope hang from the cross-tree ? 

Shamus O'Brien ! pray fervent and fast, 

May the saints take your soul, for this day is your last ; 

Pray fast an' pray sthrong, for the moment is nigh, 

When, sthrong, proud, an' great as you are, you must die. 

An' fasther an' fasther the crowd gathered there, 

Boys, horses, and gingerbread, just like a fair; 

An' whiskey was sellin', an' cussamuck too, 

An' ould men and young women enjoying the view. 

An' ould Tim Mulvany, he med the remark, 

There was n't sich a sight since the time of Noah's ark, 

An' be gorry, 't was thrue for him, for divil sich a scruge, 

Sich divarshin and crowds, was known since the deluge, 

For thousands were gathered there, if there was one, 

Waitin' till such time as the hangin' id come on. 

At last they threw open the big prison gate, 

An' out came the sheriffs and sodgers in state, 

An' a cart in the middle, an' Shamus was in it, 

Not paler, but prouder than ever, that minute. 

An' as soon as the people saw Shamus O'Brien, 

Wid prayin' and blessin', and all the girls cryin', 

A wild wailin' sound kem on by degrees, 

Like the sound of the lonesome wind blowin' through trees. 

On, on to the gallows the sheriffs are gone, 

An' the cart an' the sodgers go steadily on ; 

An' at every side swellin' around of the cart, 

A wild, sorrowful sound, that id open your heart. 

Now under the gallows the cart takes its stand, 

An' the hangman gets up with the rope in his hand ; 

An' the priest, havin' blest him, goes down on the ground, 

An' Shamus O'Brien throws one last look round. 

Then the hangman dhrew near, an' the people grew still, 

Young faces turned sickly, and warm hearts turned chill ; 

An' the rope bein' ready, his neck was made bare, 

For the gripe iv the life-strangling cord to prepare ; 



COME UP FROM THE FIELDS, FATHER ! 151 

An' the good priest has left him, havin' said his last prayer. 

But the good priest done more, for his hands he unbound, 

And with one daring spring Jim has leaped on the ground ; 

Bang ! bang ! goes the carbines, and clash goes the sabres ; 

He 's not down ! he 's alive still ! now stand to him, neighbors 1 

Through the smoke and the horses he 's into the crowd, — 

By the heavens, he 's free ! — than thunder more loud, 

By one shout from the people the heavens were shaken, — 

One shout that the dead of the world might awaken. 

The sodgers ran this way, the sheriffs ran that, 

An' Father Malone lost his new Sunday hat ; 

To-night he '11 be sleepin' in Aherloe Glin, 

An' the divil 's in the dice if you catch him ag'in. 

Your swords they may glitter, your carbines go bang, 

But if you want hangin', it 's yourself you must hang. 

He has mounted his horse, and soon he will be 
In America, darlint, the land of the free. 



COME UP FROM THE FIELDS, FATHER! 
Walt Whitman. 

COME up from the fields, father ; here 's a letter from 
our Pete, 
And come to the front door, mother ; here 's a letter from thy 

dear son. 
Lo, 't is autumn ; 

Lo, where the fields, deeper green, yellower and redder, 
Cool and sweeten Ohio's villages, with leaves fluttering in the 

moderate wind ; 
Where apples ripe in the orchards hang, and grapes on the 

trellised vines. 
(Smell you the smell of the grapes on the vines 1 
Smell you the buckwheat, where the bees were lately 

buzzing 1) 



152 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Above all, lo ! the sky so calm, so transparent after the rain, 

and with wondrous clouds ; 
Below, too, all calm, all vital and beautiful, — and the farm 

prospers well. 

Down in the fields all prospers well ; 

But now from the fields come, father, — come at the daughter's 

call ; 
And come to the entry, mother, — to the front door come, 

right away. 

Fast as she can she hurries, — something ominous, — her steps 

trembling ; 
She does not tarry to smooth her white hair, nor adjust her 

cap. 

Open the envelope quickly ; 

0, this is not our son's writing, yet his name is signed ! 

0, a strange hand writes for our dear son — stricken 

mother's soul ! 
All swims before her eyes, — flashes with black, — she catches 

the main words only ; 
Sentences broken, — gunshot wound in the breast — cavalry 

skirmish, taken to hospital, 
At present low, but will soon be better. 

Ah ! now the single figure to me 

Amid all teeming and wealthy Ohio, with all its cities and 

farms, 
Sickly white in the face and dull in the head, very faint, 
By the jamb of a door leans. 

Grieve not so, dear mother (the just grown daughter speaks 

through her sobs ; 
The little sisters huddle around, speechless and dismayed). 
See, dearest mother, the letter says Pete will soon be better. 



JUPITER AND TEN. 153 

Alas, poor boy ! he will never be better (nor, maybe, needs to 

be better, that brave and simple soul). 
While they stand at home at the door he is dead already, 
The only son is dead. 

But the mother needs to be better ; 

She, with thin form, presently dressed in black ; 

By day her meals untouched, — then at night fitfully sleep 
ing, often waking, 

In the midnight waking, weeping, longing with one deep long- 
ing, 

that she might withdraw unnoticed, silent from life, escape 
and withdraw, 

To follow, to seek, to be with her dear dead son I 



JUPITER AND TEN.— J. T. Fields. 

MRS. CHUB was rich and portly, 
Mrs. Chub was very grand, 
Mrs. Chub was always reckoned 
A lady in the land. 

You shall see her marble mansion 
In a very stately square, — 

Mr. C. knows what it cost him, 
But that 's neither here nor there. 

Mrs. Chub was so sagacious, 

Such a patron of the arts, 
And she gave such foreign orders, 

That she won all foreign hearts. 

Mrs. Chub was always talking, 
When she went away from home, 

7* 



154 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Of a most prodigious painting 
Which had just arrived from Rome. 

" Such a treasure," she insisted, 
" One might never see again ! " 

" What 's the subject 1 " we inquired. 
" It is Jupiter and Ten I " 

u Ten what ? " we blandly asked her, 
For the knowledge we did lack. 

" Ah ! that I cannot tell you, 
But the name is on the back. 

" There it stands in printed letters, — - 
Come to-morrow, gentlemen, — 

Come and see our splendid painting, 
Our fine Jupiter and Ten. " 

When Mrs. Chub departed, 
Our brains began to rack, — 

She could not be mistaken, 

For the name was on the back. 

So we begged a great Professor 

To lay aside his pen, 
And give some information 

Touching " Jupiter and Ten." 

And we pondered well the subject, 
And our Lempriere we turned, 

To find out who the Ten were ; 

But we Could not, though we burned ! 

But when we saw the picture, — 
O Mrs. Chub ! 0, fie ! ! 

We perused the printed label, 
And 't was Jupiter and Io ! 



JEANIE DEANS AND QUEEN CAROLINE. 155 



JEANIE DEANS AND QUEEN CAROLINE. 

Walter Scott. 

THE Duke of Argyle made a signal for Jeanie to advance 
from the spot where she had hitherto remained, watch- 
ing countenances which were too long accustomed to suppress 
all apparent signs of emotion to convey to her any interest- 
ing intelligence. Her Majesty could not help smiling at the 
awe-struck manner in which the quiet, demure figure of the 
little Scotchwoman advanced towards her, and yet more at 
the first sound of her broad Northern accent. But Jeanie 
had a voice low and sweetly toned, — an admirable thing in 
woman, — and she besought " her leddyship to have pity on a 
poor, misguided young creature," in tones so affecting that, 
like the notes of some of her native songs, provincial vulgarity 
w r as lost in pathos. 

The queen asked Jeanie how she travelled up from Scotland. 

" On foot mostly, madam," was the reply. 

" What ! all that immense way on foot ! How far can you 
walk in a day 1 " 

" Five-and-twenty miles, and a bittock." 

" And a what *? " said the queen, looking towards the Duke 
of Argyle. 

" And about five miles more," replied the duke. 

" I thought I was a good walker," said the queen ; " but 
this shames me sadly. " 

" May your leddyship never hae sae weary a heart that ye 
canna be sensible of the weariness of the limbs ! " said Jeanie. 
"And I didna, just a' thegether, walk the hail way neither; 
for I had whiles the cast of a cart, and I had the cast of a 
horse from Ferrybridge, and divers other easements," said 
Jeanie, cutting short her story ; for she observed the duke 
made the sign he had fixed upon. 

"With all these accommodations," answered the queen, " you 
must have had a very fatiguing journey, and I fear to little 
purpose ; since, if the king were to pardon your sister, in all 






156 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

probability it would do her little good ; for I suppose your 
people of Edinburgh would hang her out of spite." 

" She will sink herself now outright," thought the duke. 
But he was wrong. This rock was above water, and she 
avoided it. 

"She was confident," she said, "that baith town and 
country wad rejoice to see his Majesty taking compassion on a 
poor unfriended creature." 

" His Majesty has not found it so in a late instance," said 
the queen ; " but I suppose my lord duke would advise him 
to be guided by the votes of the rabble themselves, who 
should be hanged and who spared." 

" No, madam," said the duke ; " but I would advise his 
Majesty to be guided by his own feelings and those of his 
royal consort; and then I am sure punishment will only 
attach itself to guilt, and even then with cautious reluctance." 

" Well, my lord," said her Majesty, " all these fine speeches 
do not convince me of the propriety of so soon showing favor 
to your — I suppose I must not say rebellious — but, at least, 
your very disaffected and intractable metropolis. Why, the 
whole nation is in a league to screen the savage and abomi- 
nable murderers of that unhappy man ; otherwise, how is it 
possible but that, of so many perpetrators, and engaged in so 
public an action for such a length of time, one, at least, must 
have been recognized % Even this wench, for aught I can tell, 
may be a depositary of the secret. Hark ye, young woman, 
had you any friends engaged in the Porteous mob ? " 

" No, madam," answered Jeanie ; happy that the question 
was so framed that she could, with a good conscience, answer 
it in the negative. 

"But I suppose," continued the queen, "if you were pos- 
sessed of such a secret, you would hold it matter of con- 
science to keep it to yourself." 

" I would pray to be directed and guided in the line of 
duty, madam," answered Jeanie. 

" Yes, and take that which suited your own inclinations," 
replied her Majesty. 



JEANIE DEANS AND QUEEN CAROLINE. 157 

" If it like you, madam," said Jeanie, " I would hae' gaen 
to the end o' the earth to save the life of John Porteous, or of 
any other unhappy man in his condition ; but I might law- 
fully doubt how far I am called upon to be the avenger of 
his blood, though it may become the civil magistrate to do 
so. He is dead and gane to his place ; and they that have 
slain him must answer for their ain act. But my sister — 
my puir sister, Effie — still lives, though her days and hours 
are numbered. She still lives, and a word of the king's 
mouth might restore her to a broken-hearted auld man, that 
never, in his daily and nightly exercise, forgot to pray that 
his Majesty might be blessed with a long and a prosperous 
reign ; and that his throne, and the throne of his posterity, 
might be established in righteousness. madam, if ever ye 
kenned what it was to sorrow for and with a sinning and suf- 
fering creature, whose mind is sae tossed that she can be 
neither ca'd fit to live or die, — have some compassion on 
our misery ! Save an honest house from dishonor, and an 
unhappy girl, not eighteen years of age, from an early and 
dreadful death. Alas ! it is not when we sleep soft, and 
wake merrily ourselves, that we think on other people's suf- 
ferings. Our hearts are waxed light within us then ; and we 
are for righting our ain wrongs, and fighting our ain battles. 
But when the hour of trouble comes to the mind, or to the 
body, — and seldom may it visit your leddyship, — and when 
the hour of death comes, that comes to high and low, — long 
and late may it be yours, — my leddy, then, it is na what 
we have dune for oursels, but what we have dune for others, 
that we think on maist pleasantly. And the thoughts, that 
ye hae intervened to spare the puir thing's life will be sweeter 
in that hour, come when it may, than if a word of your 
mouth could hang the hail Porteous mob at the tail of ae 
tow." 

Tear followed tear down Jeanie's cheek, as, with features 
glowing and quivering with emotion, she pleaded her sister's 
cause, with a pathos which was at once simple and solemn. 

"This is eloquence," said her Majesty to the Duke of 



158 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Argyle. "Young woman," she continued, addressing her- 
self to Jeanie, " I cannot grant a pardon to your sister, but 
you shall not want my warm intercession with his Majesty. 
Take this housewife case," she continued, putting a small 
embroidered needle-case into Jeanie's hands; "do not open 
it now, but at your leisure ; you will find something in it 
which will remind you that you have had an interview with 
Queen Caroline." 

Jeanie, having her suspicions thus confirmed, dropped on 
her knees, and would have expanded herself in gratitude ; 
but the duke, who was upon thorns lest she should say more 
or less than just enough, touched his chin once more. 

"Our business is, I think, ended for the present, my lord 
duke," said the queen, " and, I trust, to your satisfaction. 
Hereafter I hope to see your Grace more frequently, both at 
Richmond and St. James's. Come, Lady Suffolk, we must 
wish his Grace good morning." 

They exchanged their parting reverences, and the duke, so 
soon as the ladies had turned their backs, assisted Jeanie to 
rise from the ground, and conducted her back through the 
avenue, — which she trod with the feeling of one who walks 
in her sleep. 



OUR SISTER.— Household Words. 

"TTP many flights of crazy stairs, 

vJ Where oft one's head knocks unawares ; 
"With a rickety table and without chairs, 
And only a stool to kneel to prayers, 

Dwells our sister. 

There is no carpet upon the floor, 
The wind whistles in through the cracks of the door ; 
One might reckon her miseries now by the score, 
But who feels interest in one so poor ] 

Yet she is our sister S 



THE BATTLE. 159 

She once was blooming and young and fair, 
With bright blue eyes and auburn hair ; 
Now the rose is eaten with cankered care, 
And her poor face is marked with a grim despair, — 
Our poor sister. 

When at early morning, to rest her head, 
She throws herself on her weary bed, 
Longing to sleep the sleep of the dead, 
Since youth and health and love are fled, — 
Pity our sister. 

But the bright sun shines on her and me, 
And on mine and hers, as on thine and thee, 
And whatever our lot in life may be, 
Whether of low or high degree, — 
Still she 's our sister ! always our sister ! 
Pity her, succor her, pray for our sister I 



THE BATTLE. — Schiller. 
Translated by Bulwer Lytton. 

HEAVY and solemn, 
A cloudy column, 
Through the green plain they marching come ! 
Measureless spread like a table dread, 
For the wild grim dice of the iron game. 
Looks are bent on the shaking ground, 
Hearts beat loud with a knelling sound ; 
Swift by the breasts that must bear the brunt, 
Gallops the Major along the front : 

"Halt!" 
And fettered they stand at the stark command, 
And the warriors, silent, halt ! 

Proud in the blush of morning glowing, 
What on the hill-top shines in flowing $ 
" See you the foemen's banners waving 1 ?" 






160 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

" We see the foeman's banners waving ! " 

"God be with ye, children and wife !" 

Hark to the music, — the trump and the fife, — 

How they ring through the ranks, which they rouse to the strife ! 

Thrilling they sound, with their glorious tone, 

Thrilling they go through the marrow and bone ! 

Brothers, God grant, when this life is o'er, 

In the life to come that we meet once more ! 

See the smoke how the lightning is cleaving asunder ! 

Hark ! the guns, peal on peal, how they boom in their thunder I 

From host to host, with kindling sound, 

The shouted signal circles round ; 

Ay, shout it forth to life or death, - 

Freer already breathes the breath ! 

The w T ar is waging, slaughter raging, 

And heavy through the reeking pall 

The iron death-dice fall ! 
Nearer they close, — foes upon foes, — 
" Ready 1 " — from square to square it goes. 

They kneel as one man from flank to flank, 
The fire comes sharp from the foremost rank, 
Many a soldier to the earth is sent, 
Many a gap by balls is rent ; 
O'er the corpse before springs the hinder man. 
That the line may not fail to the fearless van. 
To the right, to the left, and around and around, 
Death whirls in its dance on the bloody ground. 
God's sunlight is quenched in the fiery fight, 
Over the hosts falls a brooding night ! 
Brothers, God grant, when this life is o'er, 
In the life to come that we meet once more ! 

The dead men lie bathed in the weltering blood, 

And the living are blent in the slippery flood, 

And the feet, as they reeling and sliding go, 

Stumble still on the corses that sleep below, 

" What ! Francis ! " " Give Charlotte my last farewell." 



THE YOUNG GRAY HEAD. 161 

As the dying man murmurs the thunders swell, — 

"I '11 give — God ! are their guns so near ] 

Ho ! comrades ! — yon volley ! — look sharp to the 2-ear ! 

I '11 give to thy Charlotte thy last farewell ; 

Sleep soft ! where death thickest descendeth in rain, 

The friend thou forsakest thy side may regain ! " 

Hitherward, thitherward reels the fight ; 

Dark and more darkly day glooms into night. 

Brothers, God grant, when this life is o'er, 

In the life to come that we meet once more ! 

Hark to the hoofs that galloping go ! 

The adjutants flying, — 
The horsemen press hard on the panting foe, 
Their thunder booms in dying, — 

Victory ! 
Terror has seized on the dastards all, 
And their colors fall ! 

Victory I 

Closed is the brunt of the glorious fight ; 

And the day, like a conqueror, bursts on the night ; 

Trumpet and fife swelling choral along, 

The triumph already sweeps marching in song. 

Farewell, fallen brothers ; though this life be o'er, 

There 's another, hi Trb-ich we shall meet you once more ! 



THE YOUNG GRAY HEAD. — Blackwood's Magazine. 

" 1\ /T 0THER >" ( l uoth Ambrose to his thrifty dame, — 

_1_VJL So oft our peasant's use his wife to name, 
" Father," and " Master," to himself applied, 
As life's grave duties matronize the bride, — 
"Mother," quoth Ambrose, as he faced the north, 
With hard-set teeth, before he issued forth 
Vo his day labor, from the cottage door, — 



162 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

."I 'm thinking that, to-night, if not before, 

There '11 be wild work. Dost hear Old Chewton* roar 1 

It 's brewing up down westward ; and look there, 

One of those sea-gulls ! ay, there goes a pair ; 

And such a sudden thaw ! If rain comes on, 

As threats, the waters will be out anon. 

That path by th' ford 's a nasty bit of way, — 

Best let the young ones bide from school to-day." 

" Do, mother, do ! " the quick-eared urchins cried, — 

Two little lasses to the father's side 

Close clinging as they looked from him, to spy 

The answering language of the mother's eye. 

There was denial, and she shook her head. 

" Nay, nay, — no harm will come to them," she said, 

" The mistress lets them off these short dark days 

An hour the earlier ; and our Liz, she says, 

May quite be trusted — and I know 't is true — 

To take care of herself and Jenny too. 

And so she ought, — she 's seven come first of May, — 

Two years the oldest ; and they give away 

The Christmas bounty at the school to-day." 

The mother's will was law, (alas for her 

That hapless day, poor soul ! ) She could not err, 

Thought Ambrose ; and his little fair-haired Jane 

(Her namesake) to his heart he hugged again, 

When each had had her turn ; she clinging so 

As if that day she could not let him go. 

But Labor's sons must snatch a hasty bliss 

In nature's tenderest mood. One last fond kiss, — 

" God bless my little maids ! " the father said, 

And cheerly went his way to win their bread. 

So to the mother's charge, with thoughtful brow, 
The docile Lizzy stood attentive now ; 

* A fresh- water spring rushing into the sea, called Chewton Bunny. 



THE YOUNG GRAY HEAD. 163 

Proud of her years and of imputed sense, 
And prudence justifying confidence. 
And little Jenny, more demurely still, 
Beside her waited the maternal will. 
So standing hand in hand, a lovelier twain 
Gainsborough ne'er painted ; no, nor he of Spain, 
Glorious Murillo ! — and by contrast shown 
More beautiful, — the younger little one, 
With large blue eyes, and silken ringlets fair, 
By nut-brown Lizzy, with smooth parted hair 
Sable and glossy as the raven's wing, 
And lustrous eyes as dark 

" Now mind and bring 
Jenny safe home," the mother said ; " don't stay 
To pull a bough or berry by the way ; 
And when you come to cross the ford, hold fast 
Your little sister's hand, till you 're quite past, — 
That plank 's so crazy, and so slippery 
(If not o'erflowed) .the stepping-stones will be. 
But you 're good children, — steady as old folk, 
I 'd trust ye anywhere." Then Lizzy's cloak, 
A good gray duffle, lovingly she tied, 
And amply little Jenny's lack supplied 
With her own warmest shawl. " Be sure," said she, 
" To wrap it round and knot it carefully 
(Like this) when you come home ; just leaving free 
One hand to hold by. Now, make haste away, — 
Good will to school, and then good right to play." 

Was there no sinking at the mother's heart, 

When all equipt, they turned them to depart 1 

When down the lane, she watched them as they went 

Till out of sight, was no foreboding sent 

Of coming ill 1 In truth I cannot tell ; 

Such warnings have been sent, we know full well, 

And must believe — believing that they are — 



164 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

In mercy then, — to ronse — restrain — prepare. 

And, now I mind me, something of the kind 

Did surely haunt that day the mother's mind, 

Making it irksome to bide all alone 

By her own quiet 'hearth. Though never known 

For idle gossipry was Jenny Gray, 

Yet so it was, that morn she could not stay 

At home with her own thoughts, but took her way 

To her next neighbor's, half a loaf to borrow, — 

Yet might her store have lasted out the morrow, — 

And with the loan obtained, she lingered still. 

Said she : " My master, if he 'd had his will, 

Would have kept back our little ones from school 

This dreadful morning ; and I 'm such a fool, 

Since they 've been gone, I 've wished them back. But then 

It won't do in such things to humor men, — 

Our Ambrose specially. If let alone, 

He 'd spoil those children. But it 's coming on, — 

That storm he said was brewing, — sure enough — 

Well ! what of that 1 — To think what idle stuff 

Will come into one's head ! and here with you 

I stop, as if I 'd nothing else to do. 

And they '11 come home drowned rats. I must be gone 

To get dry things, and set the kettle on." 

His day's work done, three mortal miles and more 
Lay between Ambrose and his cottage door. 
A weary way, God wot ! for weary wight ! 
But yet far off, the curling smoke in sight 
From his own chimney, and his heart felt light. 

With what a thankful gladness in his face, 
(Silent heart-homage, — plant of special grace ! ) 
At the lane's entrance, slackening oft his pace, 
Would Ambrose send a loving look before ; 
Conceiting the caged blackbird at the door, 
The very blackbird strained its little throat 



THE YOUNG GRAY HEAD. 165 

In welcome, with a more rejoicing note ; 
And honest Tinker ! dog of doubtful breed, 
All bristle, back, and tail, but "good at need," 
Pleasant his greeting to the accustomed ear ; 
But of all welcomes pleasantest, most dear, 
The ringing voices, like sweet silver bells, 
Of his two little ones. How fondly swells 
The father's heart, as, dancing up the lane, 
Each clasps a hand in her small hand again ; 
And each must tell her tale, and " say her say," 
Impeding as she leads, with sweet delay, 
(Childhood's blest thoughtlessness !) his onward way. 

Such was the hour — hour sacred and apart — 
Warmed in expectancy the poor man's heart. 
Summer and winter, as his toil he plied, 
To him and his the literal doom applied, 
Pronounced on Adam. But the bread was sweet 
So earned, for such dear mouths. The weary feet, 
Hope-shod, stept lightly on the homeward way ; 
So specially it fared with Ambrose Gray 
That time I tell of. He had worked all day 
At a great clearing ; vigorous stroke on stroke 
Striking, till, when he stopt, his back seemed broke 
And the strong arm dropt nerveless. What of that? 
There was a treasure hidden in his hat, — 
A plaything for the young ones. He had found 
A dormouse-nest ; the living ball coiled round 
For its long winter sleep ; and all his thought, 
As he trudged stoutly homeward, was of naught 
But the glad wonderment in Jenny's eyes, 
And graver Lizzy's quieter surprise 
When he should yield, by guess and kiss and prayer, 
Hard won, the frozen captive to their care. 

'T was a wild evening, — wild and rough. " I knew," 
Thought Ambrose, "those unlucky gulls spoke true,—- 



166 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

And Gaffer Chewton never growls for naught, — 

I should be mortal mazed now, if I thought 

My little maids were not safe housed before 

That blinding hail-storm, — ay, this hour and more, — 

Unless by that old crazy bit of board, 

They 've not passed dry-foot over Shallow Ford, 

That I '11 be bound for, — swollen as it must be — 

Well ! if my mistress had been ruled by me — " 

But, checking the half-thought as heresy, 

He looked out for the Home-Star. There it shone, 

And with a gladdened heart he hastened on. 

He 's in the lane again, — and there below, 

Streams from the door-way that red glow, 

Which warms him but to look at. For his prize 

Cautious he feels, — all safe and snug it lies, — 

" Down, Tinker ! — down, old boy ! — not quite so free, — 

The thing thou sniffest is no game for thee. — 

But what 's the meaning 1 — no look-out to-night ! 

No living soul astir ! — Pray God, all 's right ! 

Who 's flittering round the peat-stack in such weather % 

Mother ! " You might have felled him with a feather 

When the short answer to his loud " Hillo ! " 

And the hurried question, "Are they cornel" was "No!" 

To throw his tools down, hastily unhook 
The old cracked lantern from its dusty' nook, 
And while he lit it, speak a cheering word, 
That almost choked him, and was scarcely heard, 
Was but a moment's act, and he was gone 
To where a fearful foresight led him on. 
Passing a neighbor's cottage in his way, — 
Mark Fenton's, — him he took with short delay 
To bear him company, — for who could say 
What need might be 1 They struck into the track 
The children should have taken coming back 
From school that day ; and many a call and shout 



THE YOUNG GRAY HEAD. 167 

Into the pitchy darkness they sent out, 

And, by the lantern light, peered all about, 

In every roadside thicket, hole, and nook, 

Till suddenly — as nearing now the brook — 

Something brushed past them. That was Tinker's bark ; 

Unheeded, he had followed in the dark, 

Close at his master's heels, but, swift as light, 

Darted before them now. " Be sure he 's right, — 

He 's on the track," cried Ambrose. " Hold the light 

Low down, — he 's making for the water. Hark ! 

I know that whine, — the old dog 's found them, Mark." 

So speaking, breathlessly he hurried on 

Toward the old crazy foot-bridge. It was gone ! 

And all his dull, contracted light could show 

Was the black void and dark swollen stream below. 

" Yet there 's life somewhere, more than Tinker's whine, — • 

That 's sure," said Mark. " So let the lantern shine 

Down yonder. There 's the dog, — and, hark ! " "0 dear ! " 

And a low sob came faintly on the ear, 

Mocked by the sobbing gust. Down, quick as thought, 

Into the stream leapt Ambrose, where he caught 

Fast hold of something, — a dark huddled heap, — 

Half in the water, where 't was scarce knee-deep, 

For a tall man ; and half above it, propped 

By some old ragged side-piles, that had stopt 

Endways the broken plank, when it gave way 

With the two little ones that luckless day ! 

" My babes ! my lambkins ! " was the father's cry. 

One little voice made answer, " Here am I ! " 

T was Lizzy's. There she crouched, with face as white, 

More ghastly, by the nickering lantern light, 

Than sheeted corpse. The pale blue lips, drawn tight, 

Wide parted, showing all the pearly teeth, 

And eyes on some dark object underneath, 

Washed by the turbid water, fixed like stone, — 

One arm and hand stretched out, and rigid grown, 

Grasping, as in the death-gripe, — Jenny's frock. 



168 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

There she lay drowned. Could he sustain that shock, 

The doating father 1 Where 's the unriven rock 

Can bide such blasting in its flintiest part 

As that soft sentient thing, the human heart 1 

They lifted her from out her watery bed, — 

Its covering gone, the lonely little head 

Hung like a broken snow-drop all aside, 

And one small hand. The mother's shawl was tied, 

Leaving that free, about the child's small form, 

As was her last injunction, — "fast and warm," — 

Too well obeyed, — too fast ! A fatal hold 

Affording to the scrag by a thick fold 

That caught and pinned her in the river's bed, 

While through the reckless water overhead 

Her life-breath bubbled up. 

" She might have lived 
Struggling like Lizzie," was the thought that rived 
The wretched mother's heart when she knew all. 
" But for my foolishness about that shawl, — 
And Master would have kept them back the day ; 
But I was wilful, — driving them away 
In such wild weather ! " 

Thus the tortured heart 
Unnaturally against itself takes part, 
Driving the sharp edge deeper of a woe 
Too deep already. They had raised her now, 
And, parting the wet ringlets from her brow, 
To that, and the cold cheek, and lips as cold, 
The father glued his warm ones, ere they rolled 
Once more the fatal shawl — her winding-sheet — 
About the precious clay. One heart still beat, 
Warmed by his heart's blood. To his only child 
He turned him, but her piteous moaning mild 
Pierced him afresh, — and now she knew him not. 
" Mother ! " she murmured, " who says I forgot 1 
Mother ! indeed, indeed, I kept fast hold, 
And tied the shawl quite close, — she can't be cold, — 



THE YOUNG GRAY HEAD. 169 

But she won't move, — we slipt, — I don't know how, — 
But I held on, — and I 'm so weary now, — 
And it 's so dark and cold ! dear ! dear ! — 
And she won't move, — if daddy was but here ! " 

Poor lamb, she wandered in her mind, 't was clear ; 
But soon the piteous murmur died away, 
And quiet in her father's arms she lay, — 
They their dead burden had resigned, to take 
The living so near lost. For her dear sake, 
And one at home, he armed himself to bear 
His misery like a man, — with tender care, 
Doffing his coat her shivering form to fold, 
(His neighbor bearing that which felt no cold,) 
He clasped her close ; and so, with little said, 
Homeward they bore the living and the dead. 

From Ambrose Gray's poor cottage, all that night, 

Shone fitfully a little shifting light, 

Above, below, — for all were watchers there 

Save one sound sleeper. Her, parental care, 

Parental watchfulness, availed not now. 

But in the young survivor's throbbing brow, 

And wandering eyes, delirious fever burned ; 

And all night long from side to side she turned, 

Piteously plaining like a wounded dove, 

With now and then a murmur, — " She won't move," 

And lo ! when morning, as in mockery, bright 

Shone on that pillow, — passing strange the sight, — 

That young head's raven hair was streaked with white ! 

No idle fiction this. Such things have been, 

We know. And now I tell what I have seen. 

Life struggled long with death in that small frame, 
But it was strong, and conquered. All became 
As it had been with the poor family, — 
All, saving that which nevermore might be, — 
There was an empty place, — they were but three. 



170 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 



BOB CRATCHIT'S DINNER. — Dickens. 

BUT soon the steeples called good people all to church 
and chapel, and away they came, nocking through the 
streets in their best clothes, and with their gayest faces. 
And at the same time there emerged from scores of by 
streets, lanes, and nameless turnings innumerable people 
carrying their dinners to the bakers' shops. 

Up then rose Mrs. Cratchit, Cratchit's wife, dressed out 
but poorly in a twice-turned gown, but brave in ribbons, 
which are cheap and make a goodly show for sixpence ; and 
she laid the cloth, assisted by Belinda Cratchit, second of 
her daughters, also brave in ribbons; while Master Peter 
Cratchit plunged a fork into the saucepan of potatoes, and, 
getting the corners of his monstrous shirt-collar (Bob's pri- 
vate property, conferred upon his son and heir in honor of 
the day) into his mouth, rejoiced to find himself so gallantly 
attired, and yearned to show his linen in the fashionable 
Parks. And now two smaller Cratchit s, boy and girl, came 
tearing in, screaming that outside the baker's they had smelt 
the goose, and known it for their own ; and, basking in luxu- 
rious thoughts of sage and onion, these young Cratchits 
danced about the table, and exalted Master Peter Cratchit to 
the skies, while he (not proud, although his collars nearly 
choked him) blew the fire, until the slow potatoes, bubbling 
up, knocked loudly at the saucepan-lid to be let out and 
peeled. 

" What has ever got your precious father then 1 " said 
Mrs. Cratchit. " And your brother Tiny Tim ! and Martha 
warn't as late last Christmas day by half an hour ! " 

" Here 's Martha, mother ! " said a girl, appearing as she 
spoke. 

" Here 's Martha, mother ! " cried the two young Cratchits. 
" Hurrah ! There 's such a goose, Martha ! " 

"Why, bless your heart alive, my dear, how late you are ! " 
said Mrs. Cratchit, kissing her a dozen times, and taking off 
her shawl and bonnet for her. 



BOB CRATCHIT'S DINNER. 171 

" We 'd a deal of work to finish up last night," replied the 
girl, " and had to clear away this morning, mother ! " 

"Well ! Never mind so long as you are come," said Mrs. 
Cratchit. " Sit ye down before the fire, my dear, and have a 
warm, Lord bless ye ! " 

" No, no ! There 's father coming," cried the two young 
Cratchits, who were everywhere at once. "Hide, Martha, 
hide!" 

So Martha hid herself, and in came little Bob, the father, 
with at least three feet of comforter, exclusive of the fringe, 
hanging down before him ; and his threadbare clothes darned 
up and brushed, to look seasonable ; and Tiny Tim upon his 
shoulder. Alas for Tiny Tim, he bore a little crutch, and had 
his limbs supported by an iron frame ! 

" Why, where 's our Martha 1 ?" cried Bob Cratchit, looking 
round. 

" Not coming," said Mrs. Cratchit. 

" Not coming ! " said Bob, with a sudden declension in his 
high spirits ; for he had been Tim's blood-horse all the way 
from church, and had come home rampant, — " not coming 
upon Christmas day ! " 

Martha did n't like to see him disappointed, if it were 
only in joke ; so she came out prematurely from behind the 
closet door, and ran into his arms, while the two young 
Cratchits hustled Tiny Tim, and bore him off into the 
wash-house, that he might hear the pudding singing in the 
copper. 

" And how did little Tim behave 1 " asked Mrs. Cratchit, 
when she had rallied Bob on his credulity, and Bob had 
hugged his daughter to his heart's content. 

" As good as gold," said Bob, " and better. Somehow he 
gets thoughtful, sitting by himself so much, and thinks the 
strangest things you ever heard. He told me, coming home, 
that he hoped the people saw him in the church, because he 
was a cripple, and it might be pleasant to them to remember, 
upon Christmas day, who made lame beggars walk and blind 
men see." 



172 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Bob's voice was tremulous when he told them this, and 
trembled more when he said that Tiny Tim was growing 
strong and hearty. 

His active little crutch was heard upon the floor, and back 
came Tiny Tim before another word was spoken, escorted by 
his brother and sister, to his stool beside the fire ; and while 
Bob, turning up his cuffs, — as if, poor fellow, they were 
capable of being made more shabby, — compounded some hot 
mixture in a jug with gin and lemons, and stirred it round 
and round and put it on the hob to simmer, Master Peter and 
the two ubiquitous young Cratchits went to fetch the goose, 
with which they soon returned in high procession. 

Mrs. Cratchit made the gravy (ready beforehand in a little 
saucepan) hissing hot ; Master Peter mashed the potatoes 
with incredible vigor j Miss Belinda sweetened up the aj>ple- 
sauce ; Martha dusted the hot plates ; Bob took Tiny Tim 
beside him in a tiny corner at the table ; the two young 
Cratchits set chairs for everybody, not forgetting themselves, 
and, mounting guard upon their posts, crammed spoons into 
their mouths, lest they should shriek for goose before their 
turn came to be helped. At last the dishes were set on, and 
grace was said. It was succeeded by a breathless pause, as 
Mrs. Cratchit, looking slowly all along the carving-knife, pre- 
pared to plunge it in the breast ; but when she did, and 
when the long-expected gush of stuffing issued forth, one 
murmur of delight arose all round the board, and even Tiny 
Tim, excited by the two young Cratchits, beat on the table 
with the handle of his knife, and feebly cried, Hurrah ! 

There never was such a goose. Bob said he did n't believe 
there ever was such a goose cooked. Its tenderness and 
flavor, size and cheapness, were the themes of universal 
admiration. Eked out by apple-sauce and mashed potatoes, 
it was a sufficient dinner for the whole family ; indeed, as 
Mrs. Cratchit said with great delight (surveying one small 
atom of a bone upon the dish), they had n't ate it all at last ! 
Yet every one had had enough, and the youngest Cratchits 
in particular were steeped in sage and onion to the eyebrows ! 



BOB CRATCHIT'S DINNER. 173 

But now, the plates being changed by Miss Belinda, Mrs. 
Cratchit left the room alone, — too nervous to bear wit- 
nesses — to take the pudding up, and bring it in. 

Suppose it should not be done enough ! Suppose it should 
break in turning out ! Suppose somebody should have got 
over the wall of the back yard, and stolen it, while they 
were merry with the goose, — a supposition at which the two 
young Cratchits became livid ! All sorts of horrors were 
supposed. 

Hallo ! A great deal of steam ! The pudding was out of 
the copper. A smell like a washing-day ! That was the 
cloth. A smell like an eating-house and a pastry-cook's next 
door to each other, with a laundress's next door to that ! 
That was the pudding ! In half a minute Mrs. Cratchit 
entered — flushed, but smiling proudly — with the pudding, 
like a speckled cannon-ball, so hard and firm, blazing in half 
of half a quartern of ignited brandy, and bedight with 
Christmas holly stuck into the top. 

0, a wonderful pudding ! Bob Cratchit said, and calmly 
too, that he regarded it as the greatest success achieved by 
Mrs. Cratchit since their marriage. Mrs. Cratchit said that 
now the weight was off her mind, she would confess she had 
had her doubts about the quantity of flour. Everybody had 
something to say about it, but nobody said or thought it was 
at all a small pudding for a large family. Any Cratchit 
would have blushed to hint at such a thing. 

At last the dinner was all done, the cloth was cleared, the 
hearth swept, and the fire made up. The compound in the 
jug being tasted, and considered perfect, apples and oranges 
were put upon the table, and a shovelful of chestnuts on., the 
fire. 

Then all the Cratchit family drew round the hearth, in 
what Bob Cratchit called a circle, and at Bob Cratchit's elbow 
stood the family display of glass, — two tumblers, and a 
custard-cup without a handle. 

These held the hot stuff from the jug, however, as well as 
golden goblets would have done ; and Bob served it out with 



174 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

beaming looks, while the chestnuts on the fire sputtered and 
crackled noisily. Then Bob proposed : — 

11 A merry Christmas to us all, my dears. God bless us ! " 

Which all the family re-echoed. 

" God bless us every one ! " said Tiny Tim, the last of all. 



THE LITTLE BOY THAT DIED.— J. D. Robinson. 

I AM all alone in my chamber now, 
And the midnight hour is near, 
And the fagot's crack and the clock's dull tick 

Are the only sounds I hear ; 
And over my soul, in its solitude, 
Sweet feelings of sadness glide ; 
For my heart and my eyes are full, when I think 
Of the little boy that died. 

I went one night to my father's house, — 

Went home to the dear ones all, 
And softly I opened the garden gate, 

And softly the door of the hall ; 
My mother came out to meet her son, 

She kissed me, and then she sighed, 
And her head fell on my neck, and she wept 

For the little boy that died. 

And when I gazed on his innocent face, 

As still and cold he lay, 
And thought what a lovely child he had been, 

And how soon he must decay, 
" death, thou lovest the beautiful," 

In the woe of my spirit I cried ; 
For sparkled the eyes, and the forehead was fair, 

Of the little boy that died ! 



THE LITTLE BOY THAT DIED. 175 

Again I will go to my father's house, 

Go home to the dear ones all, 
And sadly I '11 open the garden gate, 

And sadly the door of the hall ; 
I shall meet my mother, but nevermore 

With her darling by her side, 
But she '11 kiss me and sigh and weep again 

For the little boy that died. 

I shall miss him when the flowers come 

In the garden where he played ; 
I shall miss him more by the fireside, 

When the flowers have all decayed ; 
I shall see his toys and his empty chair, 

And the horse he used to ride ; 
And they will speak, with a silent speech, 

Of the little boy that died. 

I shall see his little sister again 

With her playmates about the door, 
And I '11 watch the children in their sports, 

As I never did before ; 
And if in the group I see a child 

That 's dimpled and laughing-eyed, 
I '11 look to see if it may not be 

The little boy that died. 

We shall all go home to our Father's house, — 

To our Father's house in the skies, 
Where the hope of our souls shall have no blight, 

And our love no broken ties ; 
We shall roam on the banks of the River of Peace, 

And bathe in its blissful tide : 
And one of the joys of our heaven shall be 

The little boy that died ! 



176 PUBLIC AND PAELOR READINGS. 



KING CANUTE AND HIS NOBLES.— Dr. Wolcott. 

CANUTE was by his nobles taught to fancy 
That, by a kind of royal necromancy, 
He had the power Old Ocean to control. 
Down rushed the royal Dane upon the strand, 

And issued, like a Solomon, command, — poor soul ! 

" Go back, ye waves, you blustering rogues," quoth he ; 
" Touch not your lord and master, Sea ; 

For by my power almighty, if you do — " 
Then, staring vengeance, out he held a stick, 
Vowing to drive Old Ocean to Old Nick, 

Should he even wet the latchet of his shoe. 

The sea retired, — the monarch fierce rushed on, 
And looked as if he 'd drive him from the land ; 

But Sea, not caring to be put upon, 
Made for a moment a bold stand. 

Not only made a stand did Mr. Ocean, 
But to his waves he made a motion, 

And bid them give the king a hearty trimming. 
The order seemed a deal the waves to tickle, 
For soon they put his Majesty in pickle, 

And set his royalties, like geese, a swimming. 

All hands aloft, with one tremendous roar, 
Sound did they make him wish himself on shore ; 

His head and ears most handsomely they doused, — 
Just like a porpoise, with one general shout, 
The waves so tumbled the poor king about, — 

No anabaptist e'er was half so soused. 

At length to land he crawled, a half-drowned thing, 
Indeed more like a crab than like a king, 

And found his courtiers making rueful faces ; 



HANNAH BINDING SHOES. 177 

But what said Canute to the lords and gentry, 
Who hailed him from the water, on his entry, 
All trembling for their lives or places ] 

u My lords and gentlemen, by your advice, 

I 've had with Mr. Sea a pretty bustle ; 
My treatment from my foe, not over nice, 

Just made a jest for every shrimp and mussel. 

" A pretty trick for one of my dominion ! — 
My lords, I thank you for your great opinion. 
You '11 tell me, p'r'aps, I 've only lost one game, 

And bid me try another, — for the rubber ; 
Permit me to inform you all, with shame, 

That you 're a set of knaves and I 'm a lubber/' 



HANNAH BINDING SHOES. — Lucy Larcom. 

POOR lone Hannah, 
Sitting at the window binding shoes. 
Faded, wrinkled, 
Sitting stitching in a mournful muse. 
Bright-eyed beauty once was she, 
When the bloom was on the tree ; 
Spring and winter 
Hannah 's at the window binding shoes. 

Not a neighbor 
Passing nod or answer will refuse, 

To her whisper, 
"Is there from the fishers any news 1 ?" 
0, her heart 's adrift with one 
On an endless voyage gone ! 
Night and morning 
Hannah 's at the window binding shoes. 



178 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Fair young Hannah 
Ben, the sunburnt fisher, gayly woos ; 

Hale and clever, 
For a willing heart and hand he sues. 
May-day skies are all aglow, 
And the waves are laughing so 1 
For her wedding 
Hannah leaves her window and her shoes. 

May is passing ; 
Mid the apple-boughs a pigeon coos. 

Hannah shudders, 
For the mild southwester mischief brews. 
Round the rocks of Marblehead, 
Outward bound, a schooner sped ; 
Silent, lonesome, 
Hannah 's at the window binding shoes. 

'T is November ; 
Now no tear her wasted cheek bedews. 

From Newfoundland, 
Not a sail returning will she lose, 
Whispering hoarsely, " Fishermen, 
Have you, have you heard of Ben ? " 
Old with watching, 
Hannah 's at the window binding shoes. 

Twenty winters 
Bleach and tear the ragged shore she views j 

Twenty seasons, — 
Never one has brought her any news. 
Still her dim eyes silently 
Chase the white sails o'er the sea ; 
Hopeless, faithful, 
Hannah 's at the window binding shoes. 



THE REGIMENTS RETURN. 179 



THE REGIMENT'S RETURN. — E. J. Cutler. 

I. 

HE is coming, he is coming, my true love comes horn© 
to-day! 
All the city throngs to meet him, as he lingers by the way. 
He is coming from the battle with his knapsack and his gun, — 
He, a hundred times my darling, for the dangers he hath run ! 

Twice they said that he was dead, but I would not believe the 

lie; 
While my faithful heart kept loving him, I knew he could not 

die. 
All in white will I array me, with a rose-bud in my hair, 
And his ring upon my finger, — he shall see it shining there ! 
He will kiss me, he will kiss me, with the kiss of long ago ; 
He will fold his arms around me close, and I shall cry, I 

know. 
the years that I have waited, rather lives they seemed to be, 
For the dawning of the happy day that brings him back to me ! 
But the worthy cause has triumphed, joy ! the war is over ! 
He is coming, he is coming, my gallant soldier lover ! 



II. 

Men are shouting all around me, women weep and laugh for 

joy, 
Wives behold again their husbands, and the mother clasps 

her boy ; 
All the city throbs with passion ; 't is a day of jubilee : 
But the happiness of thousands brings not happiness to me. 
I remember, I remember, when the soldiers went away, 
There was one among the noblest who is not returned to-day. 
0, I loved him, how I loved him ! and I never can forget 
That he kissed me as we parted, for the kiss is burning yet ! 



180 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

'T is his picture in my bosom, where his head will never lie ; 

VT is his ring upon my finger, — I will wear it till I die. 

0, his comrades say that, dying, he looked up and breathed 

my name ; 
They have come to those that loved them, but my darling 

never came. 
0, they say he died a hero, — but I knew how that would be, 
And they say the cause has triumphed — Will that bring him 

back to me ] 






ENLISTING AS ARMY NURSE.— Louisa M. Alcott. 

« t WANT something to do." — This remark being ad- 
-L dressed to the world in general, no one in particular 
felt it his duty to reply ; so I repeated it to the smaller world 
about me, received the following suggestions, and settled the 
matter by answering my own inquiry, as people are apt to do 
when very much in earnest. 

" Write a book," quoth my father. 

" Don't know enough, sir. First live, then write." 

" Try teaching again," suggested my mother. 

" No, thank you, ma'am ; ten years of that is enough." 

" Take a husband like my Darby, and fulfil your mission," 
said Sister Jane, home on a visit. 

''Can't afford expensive luxuries, Mrs. Coobiddy." 

"Turn actress, and immortalize your name," said Sister 
Vashti, striking an attitude. 

" I won't." 

"Go nurse the soldiers," said my young neighbor, Tom, 
panting for "the tented field." 

" I will ! " 

Arriving at this satisfactory conclusion, the meeting ad- 
journed ; and the fact that Miss Tribulation was available as 
army nurse went abroad on the wings of the wind. 

In a few days a townswoman heard of my desire, approved 
of it, and brought about an interview with one of the sister- 



ENLISTING AS ARMY NURSE. 181 

hood I wished to join, who was at home on a furlough, and 
able and willing to satisfy inquiries. 

A morning chat with Miss General S. — we hear no eud of 
Mrs. Generals, why not a Miss 1 — produced three results : I 
felt that I could do the work, was offered a place, and ac- 
cepted it, promising not to desert, but to stand ready to 
march on Washington at an hour's notice. 

A few days were necessary for the letter containing my 
request and recommendation to reach head-quarters, and 
another, containing my commission, to return ; therefore no 
time was to be lost ; and, heartily thanking my pair of 
friends, I hurried home through the December slush, as if 
the Rebels were after me, and, like many another recruit, 
burst in upon my family with the announcement, — "I 've 
enlisted ! " 

An impressive silence followed. Tom, the irrepressible, 
broke it with a slap on the shoulder and the grateful compli- 
ment, — " Old Trib, you 're a trump ! " 

"Thank you; then I'll take something," — which I did, 
in the shape of dinner, reeling off my news at the rate of 
three dozen words to a mouthful ; and as every one else 
talked equally fast, and all together, the scene was most in- 
spiring. 

As boys going to sea immediately become nautical in 
speech, walk as if they already had their sea-legs on, and 
shiver their timbers on all possible occasions, so I turned 
military at once, called my dinner my rations, saluted all 
new-comers, and ordered a dress-parade that very afternoon. 

Having reviewed every rag I possessed, I detailed some 
pieces for picket duty while airing on the fence ; some to the 
sanitary influences of the wash-tub ; others to mount guard 
in the trunk ; while the weak and wounded went to the 
Work-basket Hospital, to be made ready for active service 
again. 

To this squad I devoted myself for a week ; but all was 
done, and I had time to get powerfully impatient before the 
letter came. It did arrive, however, and brought a disap- 



182 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

pointment along with its good-will and friendliness ; for it 
told me that the place in the Armory Hospital that I sup- 
posed I was to take was already filled, and a much less 
desirable one at Hurly-burly House was offered instead. 

11 That 's just your luck, Trib. I '11 take your trunk up 
garret for you again; for of course you won't go," Tom 
remarked, with the disdainful pity which small boys affect 
when they get into their teens. 

I was wavering in my secret soul ; but that remark settled 
the matter, and I crushed him on the spot with martial brev- 
ity, — " It is now one ; I shall march at six." 

I have a confused recollection of spending the afternoon in 
pervading the house like an executive whirlwind, with my 
family swarming after me, — all working, talking, prophesy- 
ing, and lamenting, while I packed such of my things as I 
was to take with me, tumbled the rest into two big boxes, 
danced on the lids till they shut, and gave them in charge, 
with the direction, — "If I never come back, make a bonfire 
of them." 

Then I choked down a cup of tea, generously salted instead 
of sugared by some agitated relative, shouldered my knap- 
sack, — it was only a travelling-bag, but do let me preserve 
the unities, — hugged my family three times all round with- 
out a vestige of unmanly emotion, till a certain dear old lady 
broke down upon my neck, with a despairing sort of wail, — 
" my dear, my dear ! how can I let you go 1 " 

" I '11 stay, if you say so, mother." 

"But I don't; go, and the Lord will take care of you." 

Much of the Roman matron's courage had gone into the 
Yankee matron's composition, and, in spite of her tears, she 
would have sent ten sons to the war, had she possessed them, 
as freely as she sent one daughter, smiling and flapping on 
the door-step till I vanished, though the eyes that followed 
me were very dim, and the handkerchief she waved was very 
wet. 

My transit from The Gables to the village depot was a 
funny mixture of good wishes and good-bys, mud-puddles and 



MOTHER AND POET. 183 

shopping. A December twilight is not the most cheering 
time to enter upon a somewhat perilous enterprise ; but I 'd 
no thought of giving out, bless you, no ! 

When the engine screeched " Here we are ! " I clutched 
my escort in a fervent embrace, and skipped into the car with 
as blithe a farewell as if going on a bridal tour, — though I 
believe brides don't usually wear cavernous black bonnets and 
fuzzy brown coats, with a hair-brush, a pair of rubbers, two 
books, and a bag of gingerbread distorting the pockets. 

If I thought that people would believe it, T 'd boldly state 
that I slept from C. to B., which would simplify matters im- 
mensely ; but as I know they would n't, I '11 confess that the 
head under the funereal coal-hod fermented with all manner 
of high thoughts and heroic purposes "to do or die," — per- 
haps both ; and the heart under the fuzzy brown coat felt 
very tender with the memory of the dear old lady, probably 
sobbing over her army socks and the loss of her topsy-turvy 
Trib. 

At this juncture I took the veil, and what I did behind it 
is nobody's business; but I maintain that the soldier who 
cries when his mother says " Good by " is the boy to fight 
best, and die bravest, when the time comes, or go back to her 
better than he went. 



MOTHER AND POET. — Mrs. Browning. 

DEAD ! one of them shot by the sea in the east, 
And one of them shot in the west by the sea. 
Dead ! both my boys ! when you sit at the feast, 
And are wanting a great song for Italy free, 
Let none look at me ! 

Yet I was a poetess only last year, 

And good at my art, for a woman, men said ; 

But this woman, this, who is agonized here, 

The east sea and west sea rhyme on in her head 
Forever, instead ! 



184 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

"What 's art for a woman 1 To hold on her knees 

Both darlings ! to feel all their arms round her throat 

Cling, strangle a little ! to sew by degrees, 

And 'broider the long clothes and neat little coat ; 
To dream and to dote. 

To teach them — It stings there ! / made them, indeed, 
Speak plain the word " country," — /taught them, no doubt, 

That a country 's a thing men should die for at need. 
/ prated of liberty, rights, and about 
The tyrant cast out. 

And when their eyes flashed ! my beautiful eyes ! 

/ exulted ! Nay, let them go forth at the wheels 
Of the guns, and denied not. But then the surprise 

When one sits quite alone ! Then one weeps, then one kneels ! 
— God ! how the house feels ! 

At first happy news came, in gay letters moiled 
With my kisses, of camp life and glory, and how 

They both loved me, and soon, coming home to be spoiled, 
In return would fan off every fly from my brow 
With their green laurel-bough. 

Then was triumph at Turin : " Ancona was free ! " 
And some one came out of the cheers in the street, 

With a face pale as stone, to say something to me. 
My Guido was dead ! — I fell down at his feet 
While they cheered in the street. 

I bore it ! friends soothed me ; my grief looked sublime 

As the ransom of Italy. One boy remained 
To be leant on, and walked with, recalling the time 

When the first grew immortal, while both of us strained 
To the height he had gained. 

And letters still came, shorter, sadder, more strong, 
Writ now but in one hand : "I was not to faint. 



MOTHER AND POET. 185 

One loved me for two ; would be with me erelong ! 
And ' Viva 1' Italia ! ' he died for, our saint, 
Who forbids our complaint." 

My Nanni would add he " was safe, and aware 

Of a presence that turned off the balls, was imprest 

It was Guido himself who knew what I could bear, 
And how 't was impossible, quite dispossessed, 
To live on for the rest." 

On which, without pause, up the telegraph line 

Swept smoothly the next news from Gaeta : 
" Shot. Tell his mother." Ah ! ah ! " his," " their " mother ; 
not "mine." 
No voice says " my mother " again to me. What ! 
You think Guido forgot 1 

Are souls straight so happy that, dizzy with heaven, 
They drop earth's affections, conceive not of woe 1 

I think not. Themselves were too lately forgiven 

Through That Love and that Sorrow which reconcile so 
The Above and Below. 

Christ of the seven wounds, who look'dst through the dark 
To the face of Thy mother ! consider, I pray, 

How we common mothers stand desolate ; mark, 

Whose sons, not being Christs, die with eyes turned away, 
And no last word to say ! 

Both boys dead ! but that 's out of nature. We all 

Have been patriots, yet each house must always keep one ; 

'T were imbecile hewing out roads to a wall. 

And, when Italy 's made, for what end is it done, 
If we have not a son 1 

Ah ! ah ! ah ! when Gaeta 's taken, what then 1 

When the fair wicked queen sits no more at her sport 



186 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Of the fire-balls of death, crashing souls out of men 1 
When the guns of Cavalli, with final retort, 
Have cut the game short 1 

When Venice and Rome keep their new jubilee, 

When your flag takes all heaven for its white, green, and red, 

When you have your country, from mountain to sea, 
When King Victor has Italy's crown on his head, 
(And / have my dead) — 

What then 1 Do not mock me. Ah, ring your bells low 
And burn your lights faintly ! My country is there, 

Above the star pricked by the last peak of snow ; 
My Italy 's there, — with my brave civic Pair, 
To disfranchise despair ! 

Dead ! one of them shot by the sea in the east, 
And one of them shot in the west by the sea. 

Both ! both my boys ! If in keeping the feast, . 
You want a great song for Italy free, 
Let none look at me. 



FETCHING WATER FROM THE WELL. 

EARLY on a sunny morning, while the lark was singing 
sweet, 
Came, beyond the ancient farm-house, sounds of lightly trip- 
ping feet. 
'T was a lowly cottage maiden going, — why, let young hearts 

tell, — 
With her homely pitcher laden, fetching water from the well. 

Shadows lay athwart the pathway, all along the quiet 

lane, 
And the breezes of the morning moved them to and fro 

again. 



FETCHING WATER FROM THE WELL. 187 

O'er the sunshine, o'er the shadow, passed the maiden of the 

farm, 
With a charmed heart within her, thinking of no ill nor harm. 

Pleasant, surely, were her musings, for the nodding leaves 

in vain 
Sought to press their brightening image on her ever-busy 

brain. 
Leaves and joyous birds went by her, like a dim, half- waking 

dream ; 
And her soul was only conscious of life's gladdest summer 

gleam. 

At the old lane's shady turning lay a well of water bright, 
Singing soft its hallelujah to the gracious morning light. 
Fern-leaves, broad and green, bent o'er it where its silvery 

droplets fell, 
And the fairies dwelt beside it, in the spotted foxglove bell. 

Back she bent the shading fern-leaves, dipt the pitcher in 

the tide, — 
Drew it, with the dripping waters flowing o'er its glazed side. 
But before her arm could place it on her shiny, wavy hair, 
By her side a youth was standing ! — Love rejoiced to see the 

pair ! 

Tones of tremulous emotion trailed upon the morning 

breeze, 
Gentle words of heart-devotion whispered 'neath the ancient 

trees. 
But the holy, blessed secrets it becomes me not to tell ; 
Life had met another meaning, fetching water from the well. 

Down the rural lane they sauntered. He the burden- 
pitcher bore ; 

She, with dewy eyes down looking, grew more beauteous than 
before ! 



188 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

When they neared the silent homestead, up he raised the 

pitcher light ; 
Like a fitting crown he placed it on her hair of wavelets 

bright : 

Emblems of the coming burdens that for love of him she 'd 

bear, 
Calling every burden blessed, if his love but lighted there. 
Then, still waving benedictions, further, further off he drew, 
While his shadow seemed a glory that across the pathway 

grew. 

Now about her household duties silently the maiden went, 
And an ever-radiant halo o'er her daily life was blent. 
Little knew the aged matron, as her feet like music fell, 
What abundant treasure found she, fetching water from the 
well! 



THE PUMPKIN.— J. G. Whittier. 

ON the banks of the Xenil a dark Spanish maiden 
Comes up with the fruit of the tangled vine laden ; 
And the Creole of Cuba laughs out to behold 
Through orange-leaves shining the broad spheres of gold ; 
Yet with dearer delight from his home in the North, 
On the fields of his harvest the Yankee looks forth, 
Where crook-necks are coiling and yellow fruit shines, 
And the sun of September melts down on his vines. 

Ah ! on Thanksgiving Day, when from East and from West, 
From North and from South come the pilgrim and guest, 
When the gray-haired New-Englander sees round his board 
The old broken links of affection restored, 
When the care-wearied man seeks his mother once more, 
And the worn matron smiles where the girl smiled before, 
What moistens the lip, and what brightens the eye ? 
What calls back the past like the rich pumpkin-pie % 






CIVIL WAR. 189 

0, fruit loved of boyhood ! — the old clays recalling, 

When wood-grapes were purpling and brown nuts were falling ! 

"When wild, ugly faces we carved in its skin, 

Glaring out through the dark with a candle within ! 

When we laughed round the corn-heap, with hearts all in 

tune, 
Our chair a broad pumpkin, our lantern the moon, 
Telling tales of the fairy who travelled like steam 
In a pumpkin-shell coach, with two rats for her team ! 

Then thanks for thy present ! — none sweeter or better 
E'er smoked from an oven or circled a platter ! 
Fairer hands never wrought at a pastry more fine, 
Brighter eyes never watched o'er its baking, than thine ! 
And the prayer, which my mouth is too full to express, 
Swells my heart that thy shadow may never be less, 
That the days of thy lot may be lengthened below, 
And the fame of thy worth like a pumpkin-vine grow, 
% And thy life be as sweet, and its last sunset sky 
Golden-tinted and fair as thy own pumpkin-pie ! 



CIVIL WAR. — Charles D. Shanley. 

" "O IFLEMAN, shoot me a fancy shot 

_LY Straight at the heart of yon prowling vidette ; 
Ring me a ball in the glittering spot 

That shines on his breast like an amulet ! " 

" Ah, captain ! here goes for a fine-drawn bead ; 

There 's music around when my barrel 's in tune ! " 
Crack ! went the rifle, the messenger sped, 

And dead from his horse fell the ringing dragoon. 

" Now, rifleman, steal through the bushes, and snatch 
From your victim some trinket to handsel first blood ; 



190 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

A button, a loop, or that luminous patch 

That gleams in the moon like a diamond stud ! " 

" captain ! I staggered, and sunk on my track, 
When I gazed on the face of that fallen vidette, 

For he looked so like you, as he lay on his back, 
That my heart rose upon me, and masters me yet. 

" But I snatched off the trinket, — this locket of gold ; 

An inch from the centre my lead broke its way, 
Scarce grazing the picture, so fair to behold, 

Of a beautiful lady in bridal array." 

" Ha ! rifleman, fling me the locket ? — 't is she, 
My brother's young bride, — and the fallen dragoon 

Was her husband — Hush ! soldier, 't was Heaven's decree ; 
We must bury him there, by the light of the moon ! 

" But, hark ! the far bugles their warnings unite ; 

War is a virtue, — weakness, a sin ; 
There 's a lurking and loping around us to-night ; 

Load again, rifleman, keep your hand in ! " 



PATIENT JOE. 

HAVE you heard of a collier, of honest renown, 
Who dwelt on the borders of Newcastle Town ? 
His name it was Joseph, — you better may know 
If I tell you he always was called Patient Joe. 

Whatever betided, he thought it was right, 

And Providence still he kept ever in sight ; 

To those who love God, let things turn as they would, 

He was certain that all worked together for good. 



PATIENT JOE. 1H 

He praised his Creator, whatever befell ! 
How thankful was Joseph when matters went well ! 
How sincere were his carols of praise for good health, 
And how grateful for any increase in his wealth ! 

In trouble he bowed him to God's holy will ; 
How contented was Joseph when matters went ill ! 
When rich and when poor, he alike understood 
That all things together were working for good. 

If the land was afflicted with war, he declared 
'T was a needful correction for sins, which he shared ; 
And when merciful Heaven bid slaughter to cease, 
How thankful was Joe for the blessings of peace ! 

When taxes ran high and provisions were dear, 
Still Joseph declared he had nothing to fear ; 
It was but a trial, he well understood, 
From Him who made all work together for good. 

Though his wife was but sickly, his gettings but small, 
A mind so submissive prepared him for all ; 
He lived on his gains, were they greater or less, 
And the Giver he ceased not each moment to bless. 

It was Joseph's ill fortune to work in a pit 
With some who believed that profaneness was wit ; 
When disasters befell him, much pleasure they showed, 
And laughed and said, " Joseph, will this work for good 1 '" 

But ever when these would profanely advance 

That this happened by luck, and that happened by chance, 

Still Joseph insisted no chance could be found, 

Not a sparrow by accident falls to the ground. 

Among his companions who worked in the pit, 
And made him the butt of their profligate wit, 



192 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Was idle Tim Jenkins, who drank and who gamed, 
Who mocked at his Bible and was not ashamed. 

One day at the pit his old comrades he found, 
^.nd they chatted, preparing to go under ground ; 
Tim Jenkins, as usual, was turning to jest 
Joe's notion — that all things which happened were best. 

As Joe on the ground had unthinkingly laid 

His provision for dinner of bacon and bread, 

A dog, on the watch, seized the bread and the meat, 

And off with his prey ran with footsteps so fleet. 

Now to see the delight that Tim Jenkins expressed ! 
" Is the loss of thy dinner too, Joe, for the best 1 " 
"No doubt on 't," said Joe, " but as I must eat, 
'T is my duty to try to recover my meat." 

So saying, he followed the dog a long round, 

While Tim, laughing and swearing, went down under ground 

Poor Joe soon returned, though his bacon was lost, 

For the dog a good dinner had made at his cost. 

W^en Joseph came back, he expected a sneer ; 
But the face of each collier spoke horror and fear. 
" What a narrow escape hast thou had ! " they all said ; 
" The pit has fallen in, and Tim Jenkins is dead." 

How sincere was the gratitude Joseph expressed ! 
How warm the compassion which glowed in his breast ! 
Thus events, great and small, if aright understood, 
Will be found to be working together for good. 

" When my meat," Joseph cried, " was just now stolen away, 

And I had no prospect of eating to-day, 

How could it appear to a short-sighted sinner 

That my life would be saved by the loss of my dinner ! " 



THE CANAL-BOAT. 193 



THE CANAL-BOAT. — Harriet Beecher Stowe. 

OF all the ways of travelling which obtain among our 
locomotive nation, this said vehicle, the canal-boat, is 
the most absolutely prosaic and inglorious. There is some- 
thing picturesque, nay, almost sublime, in the lordly march 
of your well-built, high-bred steamboat. Go, take your stand 
on some overhanging bluff, where the Ohio winds its thread 
of silver, or the sturdy Mississippi tears its path through un~ 
broken forests, and it will do your heart good to see the gal- 
lant boat walking the waters with powerful tread ; and, like 
some fabled monster of the wave, breathing fire, and making 
the shores resound with its deep respirations. Then there is 
something mysterious, even awful, in the power of steam. 
But in a canal-boat there is no power, no mystery, no dan- 
ger ; one cannot blow up, one cannot be drowned, unless by 
some special effort. One sees all there is in the case, — 
a horse, a rope, and a muddy strip of water, — and that is 
all. 

Did you ever try it 1 If not, take an imaginary trip with 
us, just for experiment. 

" There 's the boat ! " exclaims a passenger in the omnibus, 
as we are rolling down from the Pittsburg Mansion House to 
the canal. 

"Where?" exclaim a dozen voices, and forthwith a dozen 
heads go out of the window. 

" Why, down there, under that bridge ; don't you see those 
lights V' 

"What, that little thing!" exclaims an inexperienced 
traveller ; " dear me ! we can't half of us get into it ! " 

"We! indeed," says some old hand in the business, 
" I think you '11 find it will hold us and a dozen loads like 
us." 

" Impossible ! " say some. 

" You '11 see," say the initiated ; and, as soon as you get 
out, you do see, and hear too, what seems like a general 



194 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

breaking loose from the Tower of Babel, amid a perfect 
hailstorm of trunks, boxes, valises, carpet-bags, and every de- 
scribable and indescribable form of what a Westerner calls 
"plunder." 

" That 's my trunk ! " barks out a big round man. 

" That 's my bandbox ! " screams a heart-stricken old lady, 
in terror for her immaculate Sunday caps. 

"Where's my little red box] I had two carpet-bags and 
a — My trunk had a scarle — Halloo ! where are you going 
with that portmanteau 1 — Husband ! husband ! do see after 
the large basket and the little hair trunk — 0, and the 
baby's little chair ! " 

" Go below, for mercy's sake, my dear ! I '11 see to the 



At last, the feminine part of creation, perceiving that, in 
this particular instance, they gain nothing by public speak- 
ing, are content to be led quietly under the hatches ; and 
amusing is the look of dismay which each new-comer gives to 
the confined quarters that present themselves. Those who 
were so ignorant of the power of compression as to suppose 
the boat scarce large enough to contain them and theirs find, 
with dismay, a respectable colony of old ladies, babies, moth- 
ers, big baskets, and carpet-bags already established. 

" Mercy on us ! " says one, after surveying the little room, 
about ten feet long and six high, " where are we all to sleep 
to-night ] " 

"0 me ! what a sight of children ! " says a young lady in 
a despairing tone. 

" Poh ! " says an initiated traveller ; " children ! scarce any 
here. Let 's see : one ; the woman in the corner, two ; that 
child with the bread-and-butter, three ; and then there 's 
that other woman with two. Really it 's quite moderate 
for a canal-boat. However, we can't tell till they have all 
come." 

" All ! for mercy's sake, you don't say there are any more 
coming ! " exclaim two or three in a breath ; " they can't 
come ; there is not room I " 



THE CANAL-BOAT. 195 

Notwithstanding the impressive utterance of this sentence, 
the contrary is immediately demonstrated by the appearance 
of a very corpulent elderly lady, with three well-grown 
daughters, who come down looking about them most compla- 
cently, entirely regardless of the unchristian looks of the 
company. What a mercy it is that fat people are always 
good-natured ! 

After this follows an indiscriminate raining down of all 
shapes, sizes, sexes, and ages, — men, women, children, ba- 
bies, and nurses. The state of feeling becomes perfectly des- 
perate. Darkness gathers on all faces. 

" We shall be smothered ! we shall be crowded to death ! 
we canH stay here ! " are heard faintly from one and another ; 
and yet, though the boat grows no wider, the walls no higher, 
they do live, and do stay there, in spite of repeated protesta- 
tions to the contrary. Truly, as Sam Slick says, " there 's a 
sight of wear in human natur'." 

But, meanwhile, the children grow sleepy, and divers inter- 
esting little duets and trios arise from one part or another of 
the cabin. 

" Hush, Johnny ! be a good boy," says a pale, nursing 
mamma to a great, bristling, white-headed phenomenon, who 
is kicking very much at large in her lap. 

" I won't be a good boy, neither," responds Johnny, with 
interesting explicitness ; "I want to go to bed, and so-o-o-o ! " 
and Johnny makes up a mouth as big as a teacup, and roars 
with good courage, and his mamma asks him " if he ever saw 
pa do so," and tells him that "he is mamma's dear, good 
little boy, and must not make a noise," with various observa- 
tions of the kind, which are so strikingly efficacious in such 
cases. Meanwhile, the domestic concert in other quarters 
proceeds with vigor. 

" Mamma, I 'm tired ! " bawls a child. 

" Where 's the baby's nightgown 1 ?" calls a nurse. 

" Do take Peter up in your lap, and keep him still." 

" Pray get some biscuits and stop their mouths." 

Meanwhile sundry babies strike in "con spirito," as the 



196 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

music-books have it, and execute various flourishes ; the dis- 
consolate mothers sigh, and look as if all was over with 
them ; and the young ladies appear extremely disgusted, and 
wonder " what business women have to be travelling round 
with babies." 

To these troubles succeeds the turning-out scene, when the 
whole caravan is ejected into the gentlemen's cabin, that the 
beds may be made. The red curtains are put down, and in 
solemn silence all the last mysterious preparations begin. 
At length it is announced that all is ready. Forthwith the 
whole company rush back, and find the walls embellished by 
a series of little shelves, about a foot wide, each furnished 
with a mattress and bedding, and hooked to the ceiling by a 
very suspiciously slender cord. Direful are the ruminations 
and exclamations of inexperienced travellers, particularly young 
ones, as they eye these very equivocal accommodations. 

" What, sleep up there ! / won't sleep on one of those top 
shelves, /know. The cords will certainly break." 

The chambermaid here takes up the conversation, and sol- 
emnly assures them that such an accident is not to be 
thought of at all, that it is a natural impossibility, — a 
thing that could not happen without an actual miracle ; and 
since it becomes increasingly evident that thirty ladies cannot 
all sleep on the lowest shelf, there is some effort made to ex- 
ercise faith in this doctrine ; nevertheless, all look on their 
neighbors with fear and trembling, and when the stout lady 
talks of taking a shelf, she is most urgently pressed to change 
places with her alarmed neighbor below. Points of location 
being after a while adjusted, comes the last struggle. Every- 
body wants to take off a bonnet, or look for a shawl, to find 
a cloak or get a carpet-bag, and all set about it with such zeal 
that nothing can be done. 

" Ma'am, you 're on my foot ! " says one. 

" Will you please to move, ma'am 1 " says somebody who is 
gasping and struggling behind you. 

" Move ! " you echo. " Indeed, I should be very glad to, 
but I don't see much prospect of it." 



THE CANAL-BOAT. 107 

" Chambermaid ! " calls a lady, who is struggling among a 
heap of carpet-bags and children at one end of the cabin. 

" Ma'am ! " echoes the poor chambermaid, who is wedged 
fast, in a similar situation, at the other. 

" Where 's my cloak, chambermaid 1 " 

" I 'd find it, ma'am, if I could move." 

" Chambermaid, my basket ! " 

" Chambermaid, my parasol ! " 

" Chambermaid, my carpet-bag ! " 

11 Mamma, they push me so ! " 

" Hush, child ; crawl under there, and lie still till I can 
undress you." 

At last, however, the various distresses are over, the babies 
sink to sleep, and even that much-enduring being, the cham- 
bermaid, seeks out some corner for repose.- Tired and 
drowsy, you are just sinking into a doze, when bang ! goes 
the boat against the sides of a lock ; ropes scrape, men run 
and shout, and up fly the heads of all the top shelfites, who 
are generally the more juvenile and airy part of the com- 
pany. 

" What 's that ! what 's that ! " flies from mouth to mouth ; 
and forthwith they proceed to awaken their respective rela- 
tions. " Mother ! Aunt Hannah ! do wake up ; what is this 
awful noise 'I " 

" 0, only a lock ! Pray be still ! " groan out the sleepy 
members from below. 

" A lock ! " exclaim the vivacious creatures, ever on the 
alert for information ; " and what is a lock, pray 1 " 

" Don't you know what a lock is, you silly creatures 1 Do 
lie down and go to sleep." 

" But say, there ain't any danger in a lock, is there 1 " re- 
spond the querists. 

" Danger ! " exclaims a deaf old lady, poking up her head. 
" What 's the matter 1 There hain't nothin' burst, has 
there V 

" No, no, no ! " exclaim the provoked and despairing oppo- 
sition party, who find that there is no such thing as going to 



198 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

sleep till they have made the old lady below and the young 
ladies above understand exactly the philosophy of the lock. 
After a while the conversation again subsides; again all is 
still ; you hear only the trampling of horses and the rippling 
of the rope in the water, and sleep again is stealing over you. 
You doze, you dream, and all of a sudden you are started by 
a cry, — 

" Chambermaid ! wake up the lady that wants to be set 
ashore." 

Up jumps chambermaid, and up jump the lady and two 
children, and forthwith form a committee of inquiry as to 
ways and means. 

" Where 's my bonnet 1 " says the lady, half awake, and 
fumbling among the various articles of that name. " I 
thought I hung it up behind the door." 

" Can't you find it 1 " says poor chambermaid, yawning and 
rubbing her eyes. 

" yes, here it is," says the lady ; and then the cloak, the 
shawl, the gloves, the shoes, receive each a separate discussion. 
At last all seems ready, and they begin to move off, when, lo ! 
Peter's cap is missing. " Now, where can it be 1 " soliloqui- 
zes the lady. " I put it right here by the table leg ; maybe 
it got into some of the berths." 

At this suggestion the chambermaid takes the candle, and 
goes round deliberately to every berth, poking the light 
directly in the face of every sleeper. " Here it is," she ex- 
claims, pulling at something black under one pillow. 

" No, indeed, those are my shoes," says the vexed sleeper. 

" Maybe it 's here," she resumes, darting upon something 
dark mi another berth. 

" No, that 's my bag," responds the occupant. 

The chambermaid then proceeds to turn over all the chil- 
dren on the floor, to see if it is not under them. In the 
course of which process they are most agreeably waked up 
and enlivened ; and when everybody is broad awake, and most 
uncharitably wishing the cap, and Peter too, at the bottom 
of the canal, the good lady exclaims, "Well, if this isn't 



THE CANAL-BOAT. 199 

lucky ; here I had it safe in my basket all the time ! " And 
she departs aiilid the — -what shall I say? — execrations'? — ■ 
of the whole company, ladies though they be. 

Well, after this follows a hushing up and wiping up among 
the juvenile population ; and a series of remarks commences 
from the various shelves, of a very edifying and instructive 
tendency. One says that the woman did not seem to know 
where anything was ; another says that she has waked up all 
the children, too ; and the elderly ladies make moral reflec- 
tions on the importance of putting things where yov. can find 
them, — being always ready ; which observations, being deliv- 
ered in an exceedingly doleful and drowsy tone, form a sort 
of sub-bass to the lively chattering of the upper shelfites, 
who declare that they feel quite wide awake, — that they 
don't think they shall go to sleep again to-night, — and dis- 
course over everything in creation, until you heartily wish 
you were enough related to them to give them a scold- 
ing. 

At last, however, voice after voice drops off ; you fall into 
a most refreshing slumber ; it seems to you that you sleep 
about a quarter of an hour, when the chambermaid pulls you 
by the sleeve : " Will you please to get up, ma'am ? We 
want to make the beds." 

You start and stare. Sure enough the night is gone. So 
much for sleeping on board canal-boats. 

Let us not enumerate the manifold perplexities of the 
morning toilet in a place where every lady realizes most for- 
cibly the condition of the old lady w T ho lived under a broom : 
" All she wanted was elbow room." Let us not tell how one 
glass is made to answer for thirty fair faces, one ew r er and 
vase for thirty lavations, and — tell it not in Gath ! — one 
towel for a company ! Let us not intimate how ladies' shoes* 
have, in a night, clandestinely slid into the gentlemen's cabin, 
and gentlemen's boots elbowed — or, rather, toed — their way 
among ladies' gear, nor recite the exclamations after runaway 
property that are heard. 

" I can't find nothin' of Johnny's shoe ! " 



200 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

" Here 's a shoe in the water-pitcher, — is this it 1 " 

" My side-combs are gone ! " exclaims a nymph with di- 
shevelled curls. 

" Massy ! do look at my bonnet ! " exclaims an old lady, 
elevating an article crushed into as many angles as there are 
pieces in a mince-pie. 

" I never did sleep so much together in my life," echoes a 
poor little French lady, whom despair has driven into talking 
English. 

But we must not prolong our catalogue of distresses be- 
yond reasonable bounds, and therefore we will close with 
advising all our friends, who intend to try this way of travel- 
ling for pleasure, to take a good stock both of patience and 
clean towels with them, for we think they will find abundant 
need for both. 



THE LOSS OF THE HORNET. 

CALL the watch ! call the watch ! 
" Ho ! the starboard watch ahoy ! " Have you heard 
How a noble ship so trim, like our own, my hearties, here, 

All scudding 'fore the gale, disappeared, 
Where yon southern billows roll o'er their bed so green and 

clear ? 
• Hold the reel ! keep her full ! hold the reel ! 
How she flew athwart the spray, as, shipmates, we do now, 

Till her twice a hundred fearless hearts of steel 
Felt the whirlwind lift its waters aft, acd plunge her down- 
ward bow ! 

Bear a hand ! 

Strike topgallants ! mind your helm ! jump aloft ! 
'T was such a night as this, my lads, a rakish bark was 
drowned, 
When demons foul, that whisper seamen oft, 



THE LOSS OF THE HORNET. 201 

Scooped a tomb amid the flashing surge that never shall be 
found. 
Square the yards ! a double reef ! Hark the blast ! 
O, fiercely has it fallen on the war-ship of the brave, 
When its tempest fury stretched the stately mast 
All along her foamy sides, as they shouted on the wave, 
"Bear a hand ! n 

Call the watch ! call the watch ! 
" Ho ! the larboard watch, ahoy ! " Have you heard 
How a vessel, gay and taut, on the mountains of the sea, 

Went below, with all her warlike crew on board, 
They who battled for the happy, boys, and perished for the 
free? 
Clew, clew up, fore and aft ! keep away ! 
How the vulture bird of death, in its black and viewless 
form, 
Hovered sure o'er the clamors of his prey, 
While through all their dripping shrouds yelled the spirit of 
the storm ! 

Bear a hand ! 

Now out reefs ! brace the yards ! lively there ! 
0, no more to homeward breeze shall her swelling bosom 
spread, 
But love's expectant eye bid Despair 
Set her raven watch eternal o'er the wreck in ocean's bed. 

Board your tacks ! cheerly, boys ! But for them, 
Their last evening gun is fired, their gales are overblown ; 

O'er their smoking deck no starry flag shall stream ; 
They '11 sail no more, they '11 fight no more, for their gallant 
ship 's gone down. 

JBear a hand ! 



202 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 



WOUNDED. — J. W. Watson. 

STEADY, boys, steady ! 
Keep your arms ready, 
God only knows whom we may meet here. 
Don't let me be taken j 
I 'd rather awaken, 
To-morrow, in — no matter where, 
Than lie in that foul prison-hole — over there. 

Step slowly ! 

Speak lowly ! 

These rocks may have life. 

Lay me down in this hollow ; 
We are out of the strife. 
By heavens ! the foemen may track me in blood, 
For this hole in my breast is outpouring a flood. 
No ! no surgeon for me ; he can give me no aid ; 
The surgeon I want is pickaxe and spade. 
What, Morris, a tear % Why, shame on ye, man ! 
I thought you a hero ; but since you began 
To whimper a cry like a girl in her teens, 
By George ! I don't know what the devil it means ! 

Well ! well ! I am rough ; 't is a very rough school, 
This life of a trooper, — but yet I 'm no fool ! 
I know a brave man, and a friend from a foe ; 
And, boys, that you love me I certainly know ; 

But was n't it grand 
When they came down the hill over sloughing and sand ! 
But we stood — did we not 1 — like immovable rock, 
Unheeding their balls and repelling their shock. 

Did you mind the loud cry 

When, as turning to fly, 
Our men sprang upon them, determined to die 1 

0, was n't it grand ! 



WOUNDED. 203 

God help the poor wretches that fell in that fight ; 
No time was there given for prayer or for flight ; 
They fell by the score, in the crash, hand to hand, 
And they mingled their blood with the sloughing and sand. 

Huzza ! 
Great Heavens ! this bullet-hole gapes like a grave ; 
A cnrse on the aim of the traitorous knave ! 
Is there never a one of ye knows how to pray, 
Or speak for a man as his life ebbs away 1 

Pray! 

Pray ! 

Our Father ! our Father ! why don't ye proceed 1 
Can't you see I am dying 1 Great God, how I bleed ! . 
Ebbing away ! 

Ebbing away ! 

The light of the day 
Is turning to gray. 

Pray! 

Pray ! 
Our Father in Heaven — boys, tell me the rest, 
While I stanch the hot blood from this hole in my breast. 
There 's something about a forgiveness of sin. 
Put that in ! put that in ! — and then 
I '11 follow your words and say an amen. 

Here, Morris, old fellow, get hold of my hand ; 

And, Wilson, my comrade — 0, was n't it grand 

When they came down the hill like a thunder-charged 

cloud ! 
Where 's Wilson, my comrade 1 — Here, stoop down your 

head ; 
Can't you say a short prayer for the dying and dead 1 

" Christ God, who died for sinners all, 
Hear thou this suppliant wanderer's cry ; 

Let not e'en this poor sparrow fall 
Unheeded by thy gracious eye. 



204 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Throw wide thy gates to let him in, 
And take him, pleading, to thine arms ; 

Forgive, Lord ! his life-long sin, 
And quiet all his fierce alarms." 

God bless you, my comrade, for singing that hymn ; 
It is light to my path when my eye has grown dim. 
I am dying — bend down till I touch you once more - 
Don't forget me, old fellow, — God prosper this war ! 
Confusion to enemies ! — keep hold of my hand — 
And float our dear flag o'er a prosperous land ! 



HOW KAISER WILHELM'S SISTER WAS WON. 

THE betrothal and marriage of the Princess Charlotte of 
Prussia with Nicholas, who was then only a grand duke, 
but became afterward Emperor of Russia, forms one of the 
sweetest and most romantic love-episodes in the world of 
European courts, which is usually so devoid of love and 
romance, and would, on that account alone, deserve being 
remembered, quite regardless of the historical interest which 
will henceforth adhere to all the members of the family of 
the conqueror of France. 

Princess Charlotte was born in the year 1798, and was the 
eldest daughter of King Frederick William the Third of 
Prussia, and his beautiful and accomplished wife, Queen 
Louisa. Her early childhood elapsed amidst scenes of terror 
and humiliation for the royal family of Prussia, and nobody 
would at that time have ventured to predict for her the bril- 
liant career which Providence kept in store for this child, 
born and brought up under such fatal auspices. We might, 
indeed, make an exception in favor of her mother, who, with 
that prophetic intuition which seems to have been the distin- 
guishing feature of that high-minded woman, wrote one day 
to her father, the Duke of Mecklenburg, the following lines 
about her daughter : — 






HOW KA1SEB WILHELM'S SISTER WAS WON. 205 

M Charlotte is given to silence and reserve, but under her 
apparent coldness she conceals a warm and loving heart. 
Her indifference and pride are but the dull outside of a dia- 
mond of the purest water, which some day will shine forth 
in its brilliant lustre. Her bearing and manners are noble 
and dignified. She has but few friends, but these few are 
warmly attached to her. I know her value, and predict for 
her a brilliant future, if she lives long enough." 

The young princess was, indeed, a very frail and delicate 
creature, — one of those tender flowers which seem to wait 
for the kind hand of the gardener to transplant them into a 
warmer clime. She was charming and handsome ; but her 
beauty was rather that of a pale lily than that of a blooming 
rose. 

Charlotte was just sixteen wdien, in the year 1814, the 
Grand Duke Nicholas, on his way to the camp of the allied 
armies in France, passed through Berlin, and was warmly 
welcomed as an honored guest at the royal palace. 

The description which those who saw and knew the grand 
duke at that time have given of the incomparable graces of 
his person and mind makes it easy for us to imagine that the 
heart of a young girl just budding into womanhood was cap- 
tivated and charmed by him almost at first sight. Well he 
might have said, like Caesar, " I came, I saw, I conquered." 
The princess fell in love with him, and fortunately for her 
the young grand duke returned her love fully as passionately. 

The Grand Duke Nicholas had the reputation of being one 
of the handsomest, if not the very handsomest man of his 
times ; and his majestic and stately form, which measured no 
less than six feet and two inches, was considered unequalled 
in beauty, not only in Russia, but in all Europe. He was 
vigorous, strong, full of life and health, with broad shoulders 
and chest, while his small hands and feet were of the most 
aristocratic elegance ; his whole figure realized the perfect 
model of manly and commanding beaut} 7 - which the divine 
art of a sculptor of antiquity has immortalized under the fea- 
tures of the Apollo Belvedere. His features were of the 



206 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Grecian cast, — forehead and nose formed a straight line, — 
and his large blue, sincere eyes showed a singular combina- 
tion of composure, sternness, self-reliance, and pride, among 
which it would have been difficult for the observer to name 
the predominant expression. Those who would have looked 
closely and attentively into those remarkable eyes would have 
easily believed that their threatening glances would suffice to 
suppress a rebellion, to terrify and disarm a murderer, or to 
frighten away a supplicant ; but there would have been but 
few to believe that the sternness of these eyes could be so 
entirely softened as to beam forth nothing but love and kind- 
ness. Among these few was, however, the young Prussian 
princess, who had drunk deep in their intoxicating fervor. 
It is true that she was the only person in the world in whose 
presence the Olympian gravity of his features gave way to a 
radiant cheerfulness, which made his manly beauty perfectly 
irresistible. 

In such moments his magnificent brow, always the seat of 
meditation and thought, exhibited the serene beauty and 
Attic grace of a young Athenian ; the serious Pericles 
seemed, by the invisible wand of a magician, to have been 
transformed into the youthful Alcibiades. 

Such is the nattering picture which his contemporaries have 
drawn of the personal appearance of the Grand Duke Nicholas 
at the time of his arrival at Berlin. 

At that time, however, the matchless personal charms of 
the grand duke were not enhanced by political prospects of 
the most exalted character. He was not even eventually 
considered an heir to the imperial crown of Russia. It is 
true, Alexander the First, his brother, had no children, but 
in the case of his death, which could not be expected soon, 
the Grand Duke Constantine was to inherit the throne of 
Peter the Great, and leave to Nicholas at best but the posi- 
tion of a prince of the first blood. Nevertheless, Frederick 
William, charmed alike by the beauty and intellect of his 
guest, and by the hope of uniting the sovereign houses of 
Prussia and Russia by the close ties of a family union. 



HOW KAISER WILHELM'S SISTER WAS WON. 207 

greeted the prospect of a marriage between the grand duke 
and his daughter with enthusiasm, especially when he dis- 
covered that the young folks themselves were very fond of 
each other. 

The king then delicately insinuated to his daughter that if 
she had taken a liking to the grand duke, and had reason to 
believe that the prince entertained similar feelings toward 
her, their marriage would meet with no objection on his 
part. 

But the young princess, although secretly delighting in a 
hope which so fully responded to the secret wishes of her 
heart, was either too proud or too bashful to confess to her 
father her love for the grand duke, who had not yet made 
any declaration to her. 

In this manner the day approached on which the grand 
duke was to leave Berlin. On the eve of his departure a 
grand gala supper was given in his honor at the royal palace, 
and, by way of accident or policy, the young Princess Char- 
lotte was seated by the side of her distinguished admirer. 

The grand duke was uncommonly taciturn during the even- 
ing. His high forehead was clouded, and his gloomy eyes 
seemed to follow in the space vague phantoms flitting before 
his imagination. Repeatedly he neglected to reply to ques- 
tions addressed to him, and when he was asked to respond to 
a toast which one of the royal princes had proposed in his 
honor, he seemed to awake from a profound dream which had 
entirely withdrawn him from his surroundings. 

Suddenly, as if by a mighty effort of his will, he turned to 
his fair neighbor, and whispered so as only to be understood 
by her, — 

" So I shall leave Berlin to-morrow ! " 

He paused abruptly, and looked at the princess as if he 
was waiting for an answer which expressed sorrow and grief 
on her part. But the princess was fully as proud as the 
grand duke, and, overcoming the violent throbbing of her 
heart, she said politely to him, — 

" We are all very sorry to see your Imperial Highness leave 



208 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

us so soon. Would it not have been possible for you to defer 
your departure \ " 

" You will all be very sorry ? " muttered the grand duke, 
not entirely satisfied with the vagueness of sorrow - 
these words of the princess implied. " But you in particular, 
madame ? " he added, after some hesitation. " For it will 
depend on you alone whether I shall stay here or depart." 

" Ah ! " replied Charlotte, with her sweetest smile, " and 
what have I to do to keep your Imperial Highness here 1 " 

" You must permit me to address my admiration and hom- 
age to you." 

"Is that all]" 

" And you must encourage me to please you." 

" That is much more difficult/' said the princess, with a 
deep blush, but at the same time her eyes beamed forth so 
much affection and delight that the prince could see at a 
glance that his fondest hopes had been realized beforehand. 

"During my short stay at Berlin," the grand duke con- 
tinued, in the same tone of voice, " I have taken pains to 
study your character and your affections, and this study has 
satisfied me that you would render me very happy, while on 
the other hand I have some qualities which would secure 
your own happinev 

The princess was overcome by emotion, and in her con- 
fusion did not know what to answer. At last she said, " But 
here, in the presence of the whole court, at the public table, 
you put such a question to me ! n 

" 0," replied the prince, "you need not make any verbal 
reply. It will be sufficient for you to give me some pledge 
of your affection. I see there on your hand a small ring 
whose possession would make me very happy. Give it to 
me.'' 

" What do you think of? Here in the presence of a hun- 
dred spectator - 

"Ah, it can be easily done without being seen by anybody. 
Now we are chatting so quietly with each other that there is 
not one among the guests who suspects in the least what we 



HOW KAISER WILHELM'S SISTER WAS WON. 209 

aie speaking about. Press the ring into a morsel of bread 
and leave it on the table ; I will take the talisman, and 
nobody will notice it." 

" This ring is really a talisman." 

" I expected so. May I hope to hear its history ? " 

" Why not 1 My first governess was a Swiss lady by the 
name of Wildermatt. Once she went to Switzerland in order 
to enter upon an inheritance which had been bequeathed to 
her by a distant relative. When she came back to Berlin, a 
few weeks afterward, she showed me quite a collection of 
pretty and costly jewelry, which formed part of the inheri- 
tance. ' This is a curious old ring,' said I to her, as I put 
this little old-fashioned ring on my finger. 'Does it not 
look queer and cunning 1 Perhaps it is an old relic or talis- 
man, and may have been worn centuries ago by a pious lady 
who had received it from her knight, starting for the Holy 
Land.' I tried to take the ring from my finger again, but 
I could not get it off; for I was a little fleshier then than 
now," said Charlotte, smilingly. " My governess insisted on 
my keeping the ring as a souvenir. I accepted her present, 
and the ring has been on my finger ever since. Some time 
afterward, when I was contemplating its strange workman- 
ship, I succeeded in pulling it from my finger, and was much 
surprised at seeing engraved on the inside some words which, 
though nearly rubbed out by the wear of time, were still legi- 
ble. Now, your Imperial Highness, what do you think were 
the words engraved upon it 1 I think when you hear them 
you will take some interest in the ring.'* 

" Ah ! and pray what were they 1 " 

" The words engraved upon the inside were, 'Empress of 
Russia.' This ring had undoubtedly been presented by an 
Empress of Russia to the relative of Mrs. Wildermatt, for I 
was told that both this lady and her mother had formerly 
belonged to the household of the czarina, your august grand- 
mother." 

" This is really remarkable," said the grand duke, thought- 
fully. " I am quite superstitious, and I am really inclined 



210 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

to regard this ring, if I should be happy enough to receive 
it from you as a pledge of your love, as an omen of very au- 
spicious significance." 

In answer to this second and even more direct appeal to 
her heart, the princess took a small piece of bread, played 
carelessly with it, and managed to press the ring into the 
soft crumbs. Then she dropped it playfully on the table 
quite close to the plate of her neighbor. And after this 
adroit exhibition of her skill as an actress she continued to 
eat as unconcernedly as if she had performed the most insig- 
nificant action of her life. 

With the same apparent coolness and indifference the grand 
duke picked up the bread enclosing the ring, took the latter 
out of its ingenious envelope, and concealed it in his breast, 
for it was too small to fit any of his fingers. It was this ring 
— both the pledge of Charlotte's love and the auspicious omen 
of his own elevation to the imperial dignity — which Nich- 
olas wore on a golden chain around his neck to the very last 
day of his life, and which, if we are not mistaken, has even 
descended with him into the vault of his ancestors. 

Three years after, in 181 7, Princess Charlotte, then only nine- 
teen years of age, and in the full splendor of beauty and hap- 
piness, made her entry into St. Petersburg by the side of her 
husband, whose eye had never looked prouder, and whose 
Olympian brow had never been more serene than at this 
happiest moment of his life. As he looked down upon the 
vast multitude who had flocked together from all parts of 
the vast empire to greet the young princess with shouts and 
rejoicings, and then again upon his fair young bride, perhaps 
the inscription of the ring recurred to his mind ; for, bending 
his head quite close to the ear of Charlotte, he whispered, 
" Now empress of the hearts, and some day, perhaps, empress 
of the realm." 

At this moment the procession reached the main entrance 
of the Winter Palace, where Alexander the First, the Emperor, 
surrounded by a brilliant suit of generals and courtiers, came 
to meet his beautiful sister-in-law, and conducted her into the 



A LEGEND OF BREGENZ. 21 X 

sumptuous drawing-rooms of the magnificent palace of the 
czars. Who would believe that eight short years afterward 
the brilliant young emperor had breathed his last, and that 
Nicholas and Charlotte would succeed him on the throne of 
Russia 1 Truly the inscription of the engagement-ring had 
proven prophetic ! 



A LEGEND OF BREGENZ. — Adelaide Proctee. 

GIRT round with rugged mountains 
The fair Lake Constance lies \ 
In her blue heart reflected, 

Shine back the starry skies ; 
And watching each white cloudlet 

Float silently and slow, 

You think a piece of heaven 

Lies on our earth below ! 

Midnight is there : and silence, 

Enthroned in heaven, looks down 
Upon her own calm mirror, 

Upon a sleeping town ; 
For Bregenz, that quaint city 

Upon the Tyrol shore, 
Has stood above Lake Constance 

A thousand years and more. 

Her battlements and towers 

Upon their rocky steep 
Have cast their trembling shadow 

For ages on the deep ; 
Mountain and lake and valley 

A sacred legend know, 
Of how the town was saved one night, 

Three hundred years ago. 



212 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Far from her home and kindred 

A Tyrol maid had fled, 
To serve in the Swiss valleys, 

And toil for daily bread ; 
And every year that fleeted 

So silently and fast 
Seemed to bear farther from her 

The memory of the past. 

She served kind gentle masters, 

Nor asked for rest or change ; 
Her friends seemed no more new ones, 

Their speech seemed no more strange ; 
And when she led her cattle 

To pasture every day, 
She ceased to look and wonder 

On which side Bregenz lay. 

She spoke no more of Bregenz 

With longing and with tears ; 
Her Tyrol home seemed faded 

In a deep mist of years. 
She heeded not the rumors 

Of Austrian war and strife ; 
Each day she rose contented, 

To the calm toils of life. 

Yet, when her master's children 

Would clustering round her stand, 
She sang them the old ballads 

Of her own native land ; 
And when at morn and evening 

She knelt before God's throne, 
The accents of her childhood 

Rose to her lips alone. 

And so she dwelt : the valley 
More peaceful year by year ; 



A LEGEND OF BREGENZ. 213 

When suddenly strange portents 

Of some great deed seemed near. 
The golden corn was bending 

Upon its fragile stalk, 
While farmers, heedless of their fields, 

Paced up and down in talk. 

The men seemed stern and altered, 

With looks cast on the ground ; 
With anxious faces, one by one, 

The women gathered round ; 
All talk of flax or spinning, 

Or work, was put away ; 
The very children seemed afraid 

To go alone to play. 

One day, out in the meadow, 

With strangers from the town, 
Some secret plan discussing, 

The men talked up and down ; 
Yet now and then seemed watching 

A strange uncertain gleam, 
That looked like lances 'mid the trees* 

That stood below the stream. 

At eve they all assembled, 

All care and doubt were fled ; 
With jovial laugh they feasted, 

The board was nobly spread. 
The elder of the village 

Rose up, his glass in hand, 
And cried, " We drink the downfall 

Of an accursed land ! 

" The night is growing darker, — 

Ere one more day is flown, 
Bregenz, our foeman's stronghold, 

Bregenz shall be our own ! " 



214 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

The women shrank in terror, 
(Yet pride, too, had her part,) 

But one poor Tyrol maiden 
Felt death within her heart. 

Before her stood fair Bregenz, 

Once more her towers arose ; 
What were the friends beside her 1 

Only her country's foes ! 
The faces of her kinsfolk, 

The days of childhood flown, 
The echoes of her mountains, 

Keclaimed her as their own. 

Nothing she heard around her 

(Though shouts rang forth again), 
Gone were the green Swiss valleys, 

The pasture and the plain ; 
Before her eyes one vision, 

And in her heart one cry, 
That said, " Go forth, save Bregenz, 

And then, if need be, die ! " 

With trembling haste and breathless, 

With noiseless step she sped j 
Horses and weary cattle 

Were standing in the shed ; 
She loosed the strong white charger, 

That fed from out her hand ; 
She mounted, and she turned his head 

Towards her native land. 

Out — out into the darkness, — 
Faster, and still more fast ; 

The smooth grass flies behind her, 
The chestnut wood is past ; 

She looks up j clouds are heavy : 
Why is her steed so slow 1 — 



A LEGEND OF BREGENZ. 215 

Scarcely the wind beside them 
Can pass them as they go. 

" Faster ! " she cries, " 0, faster ! " 

Eleven the church-bells chime ; 
" God," she cries, " help Bregenz, 

And bring me there in time ! " 
But louder than bells' ringing, 

Or lowing of the kine, 
Grows nearer in the midnight 

The rushing of the Rhine. 

Shall not the roaring waters 

Their headlong gallop check % 
The steed draws back in terror, 

She leans above his neck 
To watch the flowing darkness, — 

The bank is high and steep, — 
One pause — he staggers forward 

And plunges in the deep. 

She strives to pierce the blackness, 

And looser throws the rein ; 
Her steed must breast the waters 

That dash above his mane. 
How gallantly, how nobly, 

He struggles through the foam • 
And see — in the far distance 

Shine out the lights of home ! 

Up the steep bank he bears her, 

And now they rush again 
Towards the heights of Bregenz, 

That tower above the plain. 
They reach the gate of Bregenz 

Just as the midnight rings, 
And out come serf and soldier, 

To meet the news she brings. 



216 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Bregenz is saved ! ere daylight 

Her battlements are manned ; 
Defiance greets the army 

That marches on the land. 
And if to deeds heroic 

Should endless fame be paid, 
Bregenz does well to honor 

The noble Tyrol maid. 

Three hundred years are vanished, 

And yet upon the hill 
An old stone gateway rises, 

To do her honor still. 
And there, when Bregenz women 

Sit spinning in the shade, 
They see in quaint old carving 

The Charger and the Maid. 

And when, to guard old Bregenz, 

By gateway, street, and tower, 
The warder paces all night long, 

And calls each passing hour : 
" Nine," " ten," " eleven," he cries aloud, 

And then (0 crown of Fame !) 
When midnight pauses in the skies, 

He calls the maiden's name ! 



THE VOICES AT THE THRONE. — ^ 7 . Westwood. 

A LITTLE child, 
A little meek-faced, quiet village child, 
Sat singing by her cottage door at eve 
A low, sweet sabbath song. No human ear 
Caught the faint melody, — no human eye 
Beheld the upturned aspect, or the smile 
That wreathed her innocent lips while they breathed 



THE VOICES AT THE THRONE. 217 

The oft-repeated burden of the hymn, 
" Praise God ! Praise God ! " 

A seraph by the throne 
In full glory stood. With eager hand 
He smote the golden harp-string, till a flood 
Of harmony on the celestial air 
Welled forth, unceasing. There with a great voice, 
He sang the " Holy, holy evermore, 
Lord God Almighty ! " and the eternal courts 
Thrilled with the rapture, and the hierarchies, 
Angel, and rapt archangel, throbbed and burned 
With vehement adoration. 

Higher yet 
Rose the majestic anthem, without pause, 
Higher, with rich magnificence of sound, 
To its full strength ; and still the infinite heavens 
Rang with the " Holy, holy evermore ! " 
Till, trembling with excessive awe and love, 
Each sceptred spirit sank before the Throne 
With a mute hallelujah. 

But even then, 
While the ecstatic song was at its height, 
Stole in an alien voice, — a voice that seemed 
To float, float upward from some world afar, — 
A meek and childlike voice, faint, but how sweet ! 
That blended with the spirits' rushing strain, 
Even as a fountain's music, with the roll 
Of the reverberate thunder. 

Loving smiles 
Lit up the beauty of each angel's face 
At that new utterance, smiles of joy that grew 
More joyous yet, as ever and anon 
Was heard the simple burden of the hymn, 
" Praise God ! praise God ! " 

And when the seraph's song 
Had reached its close, and o'er the golden lyre 
Silence hung brooding, — when the eternal courts 



218 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Rang with the echoes of his chant sublime, 

Still through the abysmal space that wandering voice 

Came floating upward from its world afar, 

Still murmured sweet on the celestial air, 

" Praise God ! praise God ! " 



ABOU EL MAHR AND HIS HORSE. 

Alger's Oriental Poetry. 

IT is Abou el Mahr, the gallant Sheik of Al Azeed ; 
How fondly he is stroking Lahla, his unrivalled steed ! 

Among the hills of Schem the tents of Al Azeed are pitched, 
And close by every warrior's door the favorite horse is hitched. 

For valor none can stand the men of Al Azeed beside ; 
And Houri only with their maids comparison can bide. 

This tribe the unchallenged banner, too, throughout Arabia 

bears, 
For the wondrous strength and beauty of their stallions and 

their mares. 

But first among their warriors stands the Sheik, Abou el Mahr, 
And conscious Lahla shines, among their steeds, the peerless 
star. 

When clasps Abou proud Lahla's neck to kiss his veined cheek, 
The courser looks his love as plainly as if he could speak. 

Abou caresses him before the people gathered there, 
Who gaze with wonder at his loving and his haughty air. 

And Leila, Selim, Zar — the wife and children of the Sheik — 
Will pat and kiss him, and his hoof within their bosoms take. 



ABOU EL MAHR AND HIS HORSE. 219 

And twenty chiefs press near, their servants ranged in ordered 

bands, 
The privilege to claim that he shall eat from out their hands. 

For Lahla is of Al Azeed the crowning joy and pride \ 
The envy and despair of all the Arab tribes beside. 

Another horse so celebrated never spurned the earth ; 
Through white Koureen, the mare of Solomon, he draws his 
birth; 

And traces back, in straight, untainted rill, his royal blood 
To thrice illustrious Hufafa, great Abraham's sable stud. 

Hang o'er his spotless forehead, which is white as whitest milk, 
Soft tufts of handsome hair as glossy as the finest silk. 

Those tufts compose a veil which every breeze in openwork 

hems, 
And underneath it glimpse his rapid eyes, two burning gems. 

His neck and chest the graces of a swan's in nothing lack ; 
A gorgeous mantle, woven of silk and gold, beclothes his back. 

His pedigree, two hundred high descents, his bosom wears 
In bag of musk, wherewith two precious amulets he wears. 

His limbs and sockets so elastic, all his motions are 

So swift and smooth, the rider scarcely feels a start or jar. 

Abou el Mahr would on his back, in rapid gallop still, 
A brimming cup of sherbet quaff, and not a droplet spill. 

Indeed, a bard so mounted might receive the fancy bold, 
His courser was a bird whose wings an unseen movement hold. 

No price or bribe could cause the Sheik, nor any desperate need, 
To part with his redoubtable and idolized steed. 



220 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

It is Abou el Mahr, with twelve choice men of Al Azeed ; 
And they to seize the hostile Bagdad caravan proceed. 

Soon through the Synor pass into the open plain they wind, 
And shake their spears, and shout, their blue caftans stream 
wide behind. 

Abou, his Lahla's sinews strung with fire, is far before, 
As on the undefended, scattering caravan they pour. 

To guard their goods two merchants of Damascus bravely stand, 
But in an instant both are stretched in death upon the sand. 

The Sheik and his good men of Al Azeed pile all the spoil 
Upon the camels, and their homeward way begin to toil. 

At noon they halt to rest awhile beside a desert spring ; 
Ah ! who can tell what utter ruin one thoughtless hour may 
bring 1 

Their foe, the fierce Pacha of Acre, leads his horsemen there. 
Cries, " Strike ! and I command you, save Abou, not one to 
spare ! " 

So all are slain. The Sheik, in his right arm a fearful wound, 
His darling Lahla led before, is on a camel bound. 

They journey on until they reach the mountains of Saphad, 
Just as the sun drops out of sight, and night falls dark and sad. 

The old Pacha commands each soldier there to pitch his tent, 
And takes good care the escape of horse or camel to prevent. 

The keeper of the Sheik has tied him fast both hand and foot, 
And fallen asleep, and dreams of fighting, routing, and pursuit. 

But the poor captive, restless with his torturing wound, still 

wakes, 
And Lahla's low, disconsolate neigh his anguish sharper makes. 



ABOU EL MAHR AND HIS HORSE. 221 

Bound as he is, be rolls and crawls one last caress to give 
The steed from whom he had not thought to part while he 
should live. 

" Lahla ! " sighs Abou, "no more shall I rejoice with thee 
To skim the waste, the wild Simoom not prouder or more free ; 

" No more with thee the Jordan swim, whose spurned water 

drips 
From off thy side, as white and pure as foam from off thy lips. 

" A bitter fate consigns me to my unrelenting foe ; 
But thou, bright gem of Al Azeed, in liberty shalt go. 

" What wouldst thou do, poor friend, shut in the close and 

wretched khan 
Of some Turk huckster not deserving to be called a man 1 

" No, whether fortune dooms me for a slave or here to die, 
Thou shalt, jewel of a thousand hearts, in freedom fly. 

" Go to the tents thou knowest so well, amid the hills of Schem, 
And say, Abou el Mahr will nevermore return to them. 

" Thy head put through the door where my dear wife and chil- 
dren are, 
And lick the hands of Leila, Selim, and sweet little Zar. 

" Lahla, Lahla ! must I now from thee forever part 1 
Farewell, farewell, beloved comrade of my life and heart ! " 

So saying, with his teeth laboriously he gnawed apart 
The tethering cord that went around the stake, and bade him 
start ! 

But the sagacious soul bounds not away. The bonds he smells 
That bind his master's limbs. Eack fact to him its secret tells. 



222 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

With tenderness he licks the blood upon the shattered arm, 
Gives forth a low and painful whine, but raises no alarm. 

His teeth the girdle seize ; he lifts Abou, so spare and tall ; 
Now, foolish guards, now, old Pacha, defiance to you all ! 

Great Lahla proves himself a steed of living steel and fire ; 
To reach him vain are all the struggles of their mad desire. 

For the hills of Schem he aims his way through the open, lus- 
trous night, 
Straight as an arrow goes, swift as the lightning in its flight. 

The stars one after one go down behind the desert's rim, 
But the pale and eager moon rushes in even pace with him. 

The palm-clumps on oases lift their heads of yellow green 
Above the downs of endless sand, and vanish soon as seen. 

The lagging sun comes up ; twelve weary, mighty leagues are 

passed ; 
The lovely haunts and tents of Al Azeed appear at last. 

The anxious tribe, whose thirteen best are out, is all astir ; 
The mother deems it time her sons should have returned to her. 

Ha ! what upon the far horizon moves 1 A single steed 1 
Is this what we looked for with such intensity of greed 1 

Nearer ! can it be Lahla 1 In his mouth a bundle 1 No, 
The matchless Lahla never from adventure came so slow. 

The godlike steed, with staggering steps, faint pantings, almost 

spent, 
The girdle bites, reels up, and lays Abou before his tent. 

One instant stands he, looking round, as if reward to reap 
From those who, thrilled with grateful love and wonder, gaze 
and weep. 



UNDER THE SNOW. 223 

Then, while the congregated tribe break forth in piercing cries, 
The noble creature, gasping, falls, all blood and foam, and dies. 

Thabet Ben Ali, poet of the tribe, leaps through the crowd, 
With soul on fire, and sings the feat in panegyric proud. 

To thrilling tones of love and pride he smites his burning lyre ; 
With raining eyes and heaving bosoms all as one respire. 

" No man," he says, " not even Hatim Tai, could have done 
A nobler deed, a more impassioned gratitude have won. 

" Long as the Horse shall be the friend and servant of our race, 
The glorious fame of Lahla shall resound through time and 
space." 

Full many a day has passed since Ali sang his touching song, 
And from the vale the tents of Al Azeed have vanished long ; 

But in the night of Arab lore still shineth, like a star, 
The story of the peerless Lahla and Abou el Mahr. 



UNDER THE SNOW. 

f TNDEB, the snow our baby lies, 

y~J The fringed lids dropped o'er her eyes ; 

The tiny hands upon her breast, 

Like twin-born lilies taking rest ; 

W T hile o'er her grave the rough winds blow ; 

Under the snow, — under the snow. 

Under the snow our baby lies, 
While we sit at home and list for her cries; 
And her mother asks (she is very lone), 
" Why has my little baby gone 1 " 



224 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Ah ! happy, she feeleth not our woe ; 
Under the snow, — under the snow. 

Under the snow our baby lies, 
As pure as the clouds far up the skies, — 
Those delicate banners of vapor, furled 
Beyond the breath of this noisome world. 
'T is the blood of Christ hath made her so ; 
Under the snow, — under the snow. 

Above the snow our baby dwells, 

Where never the solemn death-bell knells ; 

Where Sin and Death are never known, 

Nor dark-browed Pain with her voice of moan ; 

Where the angels move on wings that glow. 

Above the snow, — above the snow. 

Above the snow our baby dwells, 

And we dry our tears when we think she swells 

The song of the angels and just men there, 

With a voice so sweet and a face so fair. 

And we 're glad we 've sent them a voice from below 

Above the snow, — above the snow. 



HATS. — Oliver Wendell Holmes. 

THE old gentleman who sits opposite, finding that spring 
had fairly come, mounted a white hat one day, and 
walked into the street. It seems to have been a premature 
or otherwise exceptionable exhibition. When the old gentle- 
man came home, he looked very red in the face, and com- 
plained that he had been "made sport of." By sympathizing 
questions, I learned from him that a boy had called him " old 
daddy," and asked him when he had his hat whitewashed. 
This incident led me to make some observations at table 



HATS. 225 

the next morning, which I here repeat for the benefit of the 
readers of this record. The hat is the vulnerable point in 
the artificial integument. I learned this in early boyhood. 
I was once equipped in a hat of Leghorn straw, having a brim 
of much wider dimensions than were usual at that time, and 
sent to school in that portion of my native town which lies 
nearest to this metropolis. On my way I was met by a 
" Port-chuck," as we used to call the young gentlemen of that 
locality, and the following dialogue ensued : — 

The Port Chuck. — Hullo, you-sir, joo know th' wuz gon-to 
be a race to-morrah 1 

Myself. — No. Who 's gon-to run, 'n' wher's 't gon-to be 1 

The Port Chuck. — Squire Mico 'n' Doctor Williams, round 
the brim o' your hat. 

These two much-respected gentlemen being the oldest in- 
habitants at that time, and the alleged race-course being out 
of the question, the Port-chuck also winking and thrusting his 
tongue into his cheek, I perceived that I had been trifled with, 
and the effect has been to make me sensitive and observant 
respecting this article of dress ever since. Here is an axiom 
or two relating to it. 

A hat which has been popped, or exploded by being sat 
down upon, is never itself again afterwards. 

It is a favorite illusion of sanguine natures to believe the 
contrary. 

Shabby gentility has nothing so characteristic as its hat. 
There is always an unnatural calmness about its nap, and an 
unwholesome gloss, suggestive of a wet brush. The last effort 
of decayed fortune is expended in smoothing its dilapidated 
castor. The hat is the ultimum moriens of "respectability." 

The old gentleman took all these remarks and maxims very 
pleasantly, saying, however, that he had forgotten most of his 
French except the word for potatoes, — pummies de tare. Ul- 
timum moriens, I told him, is old Italian, and signifies last 
thing to die. With this explanation he was well contented, 
and looked quite calm when I saw him afterwards in the entry 
with a black hat on His head and the white one in his hand. 
10* o 



226 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 



AN ORDER FOR A PICTURE. — Alice Cabt. 

OGOOD painter, tell me true, 
Has your hand the cunning to draw 
Shapes of things that you never saw 1 
Ay 1 Well, here is an order for you. 

Woods and cornfields, a little brown, — • 
The picture must not be over-bright, — 
Yet all in the golden and gracious light 

Of a cloud, when the summer sun is down. 

Alway and alway, night and morn, 

Woods upon woods, with fields of corn 
Lying between them, not quite sere, 
And not in the full, thick, leafy bloom, 
When the wind can hardly find breathing-room 

Under their tassels, — cattle near, 
Biting shorter the short green grass, 
And a hedge of sumach and sassafras, 
With bluebirds twittering all around, — 
(Ah, good painter, you can't paint sound !) — 

These, and the house where I was born, 
Low and little, and black and old, 
With children, many as it can hold, 
All at the windows, open wide, — 
Heads and shoulders clear outside, 
And fair young faces all ablush : 

Perhaps you may have seen, some day, 

Roses crowding the selfsame way, 
Out of a wilding, wayside bush. 

Listen closer. When you have done 

With woods and cornfields and grazing herds, 
A lady, the loveliest ever the sun 
Looked down upon, you must paint for me ; 
0, if I only could make you see 



AN ORDER FOR A PICTURE. 227 

The clear blue eyes, the tender smile, 
The sovereign sweetness, the gentle grace, 
The woman's soul, and the angel's face 

That are beaming on me all the while ! — 

I need not speak these foolish words : 

Yet one word tells you all I would say, — 
She is my mother : you will agree 

That all the rest may be thrown away. 

Two little urchins at her knee 
You must paint, sir : one like me, — 
The other with a clearer brow, 

And the light of his adventurous eyes 

Flashing with boldest enterprise : 
At ten years old he went to sea, — 

God knoweth if he be living now, — 

He sailed in the good ship Commodore, — 
Nobody ever crossed her track 
To bring us news, and she never came back. 

Ah, 't is twenty long years and more 
Since that old ship went out of the bay 

With my great-hearted brother on her deck ; 

I watched him till he shrank to a speck, 
And his face was toward me all the way. 

Bright his hair was, a golden brown, 

The time we stood at our mother's knee : 

That beauteous head, if it did go down, 
Carried sunshine into the sea ! 

Out in the fields one summer night 

We were together, half afraid 

Of the corn-leaves' rustling, and of the shade 
Of the high hills, stretching so still and far, — 
Loitering till after the low little light 

Of the candle shone through the open door, 
And over the haystack's pointed top, 



228 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

All of a tremble, and ready to drop, 

The first half-hour, the great yellow star, 

That we, with staring, ignorant eyes, 
Had ofteu and often watched to see 

Propped and held in its place in the skies 
By the fork of a tall red mulberry-tree, 

Which close in the edge of our flax-field grew, — 
Dead at the top, — just one branch full 
Of leaveu, notched round, and lined with wool, 

From which it tenderly shook the dew 
Over our heads, when we came to play 
In its handbreadth of shadow, day after day : — 

Afraid to go home, sir ; for one of us bore 
A nest full of speckled and thin-shelled eggs, — 
The other, a bird, held fast by the legs, 
Not so big as a straw of wheat : 
The berries we gave her she would n't eat, 
But cried and cried, till we held her bill, 
So slim and shining, to keep her still. 

At last we s,tood at our mother's knee. 

Do you think, sir, if you try, 

You can paint the look of a lie 1 

If you can, pray have the grace 

To put it solely in the face 
Of the urchin that is likest me : 

I think 't was solely mine, indeed : 

But that 's no matter, — paint it so ; 

The eyes of our mother — (take good heed) — 
Looking not on the nestful of eggs, 
Nor the fluttering bird, held so fast by the legs, 
But straight through our faces down to our lies, 
And 0, with such injured, reproachful surprise ! 

I felt my heart bleed where that glance went, as though 

A sharp blade struck through it. 

You, sir, know, 
That you on the canvas are to repeat 



BARBARA. 229 

Things that are fairest, things most sweet, — 

Woods and cornfields and mulberry-tree, — 

The mother, — the lads, with their bird, at her knee : 

But, 0, that look of reproachful woe ! 
High as the heavens your name I '11 shout, 
If you paint me the picture, and leave that out. 



BARBARA. — Alexander Smith. 

ON the Sabbath day, 
Through the churchyard old and gray, 
Over the crisp and yellow leaves, I help my rustling way ; 
And amid the words of mercy, falling on the soul like balms ; 
'Mong the gorgeous storms of music in the mellow organ-calms; 
'Mong the upward-streaming prayers, and the rich and solemn 
psalms, 
I stood heedless, Barbara ! 

My heart was otherwhere, 

While the organ filled the air, 

And the priest with outspread hands blessed the people with 

a prayer. 
But when rising to go homeward, with a mild and saintlike shine 
Gleamed a face of airy beauty with its heavenly eyes on mine, — 
Gleamed and vanished in a moment. the face was like to 

thine, 
Ere you perished, Barbara ! 

that pallid face ! 

Those sweet, earnest eyes of grace ! 

When last I saw them, dearest, it was in another place ; 

You came running forth to meet me with my love-gift on your 

wrist, 
And a cursed river killed thee, aided by a murderous mist. 
0, a purple mark of agony was on the mouth I kissed, 
When last I saw thee, Barbara ! 



230 PUBLIC AND PAELOR READINGS. 

Those dreary years, eleven, 

Have you pined within your heaven, 

And is this the only glimpse of earth that in that time was 

given? 
And have you passed unheeded all the fortunes of your race — 
Your father's grave, your sister's child, your mother's quiet 

face — 
To gaze on one who worshipped not within a kneeling place ? 
Are you happy, Barbara 1 

'Mong angels do you think 
Of the precious golden link 

I bound around your happy arm while sitting on yon brink 1 
Or when that night of wit and wine, of laughter and guitars, 
Was emptied of its music, and we watched through lattice-bars 
The silent midnight heaven moving o'er us with its stars, 
Till the morn broke, Barbara 1 

In the years I 've changed, 
Wild and far my heart has ranged, 

And many sins and errors deep have been on me avenged ; 
But to you I have been faithful, whatsoever good I 've lacked ; 
I loved you, and above my life still hangs that love intact, 
Like a mild, consoling rainbow o'er a savage cataract. 
Love has saved me, Barbara ! 

Love ! I am unblest, 
With monstrous doubts opprest 

Of much that 's dark and nether, much that 's holiest and best. 
Could I but win you for an hour from off that starry shore, 
The hunger of my soul were stilled ; for Death has told you more 
Than the melancholy world doth know, — things deeper than 
all lore. 
Will you teach me, Barbara 1 

In vain, in vain, in vain ! 
You will never come again : — 



THE BOAT OF GRASS. 231 

There droops upon the dreary hills a mournful fringe of rain, 
The gloaming closes slowly round, unblest winds are in the tree, 
Round selfish shores forever moans the hurt and wounded sea : 
There is no rest upon the earth, peace is with Death and thee, — - 
I am weary, Barbara ! 



THE BOAT OF GRASS. — Miss Kemble Butler. 

FOR years the slave endured his yoke, 
Down-trodden, wronged, misused, opprest; 
Yet life-long serfdom could not choke 
The seeds of freedom in his breast. 

At length, upon the north-wind came 
A whisper stealing through the land ; 

It spread from hut to hut like flame, — 
" Take heart ! the hour is near at hand." 

The whisper spread, and lo ! on high 

The dawn of an unhoped-for day ! 
" Be glad ! the Northern troops are nigh, — » 

The fleet is in Port-Royal Bay ! " 

Responsive to the words of cheer, 
An inner voice said, " Rise and flee ! 

Be strong, and cast away all fear : 
Thou art a man, and thou art free ! " 

And full of new-born hope and might, 

He started up, and seaward fled ; 
By day he turned aside, by night 

He followed where the North Star led. 

Through miles of barren pine and waste, 
And endless breadth of swamp and sedge, 



232 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

By streams, whose tortuous path is traced 
Iu tangled growth along their edge, 

Two nights he fled, —no sound was heard, 
He met no creature on his way ; 

Two days crouched in the bush; the third 
He hears the bloodhounds' distant bay. 

They drag him back to stripes and shame, 

And bitter, unrequited toil ; 
With red-hot gyves his feet they maim, 

All future thought of flight to foil. 

We, shuddering, turn from such a cup, 
Nor dare to look on his despair ; 

For them, 0, let us offer up 
The Saviour's sacrificial prayer ! 

But the celestial voice, that spake 

Erst in his soul, might not be hushed ; 

The sense of birthright, once awake, 
Could never, nevermore be crushed. 

And, brave of heart and strong of will, 
He kept his purpose, laid his plan ; 

Though crippled, chained and captive still, 
A slave no longer, but a man. 

Eleven months his soul he steeled 
To toil and wait in silent pain, 

But in the twelfth his wounds were healed, - 
He burst his bonds, and fled again. 

A weary winding stream he sought, 
And crossed its waters to and fro, — 

An Indian wile, to set at naught 
The bloody instinct of his foe.- 



THE BOAT OF GRASS- 233 

The waters widen to a fen, 

And, while he hid him, breathless, there, 
With brutal cries of dogs and men, 

The hunt went round and round his lair. 

The baffled hounds had lost the track : 

With many a curse and many a cry, 
The angry owners called them back ; 

And so the wild pursuit went by. 

The deadly peril seemed to pass ; 

And then he dared to raise his head 
Above the waving marish grass, 

That mantled o'er the river-bed. 

Those long broad leaves that round him grew 

He had been wont to bind and plait ; 
And well, with simple skill, he knew 

To shape the basket and the mat. 

Now, in their tresses sad and dull 

He saw the hope of his escape, 
And patiently began to cull, 

And weave them in canoe-like shape. 

To give the reedy fabrics light 

An armor 'gainst the soaking brine, 
With painful care he sought by night 

The amber weepings of the pine. 

And since on the Egyptian wave, 

The Hebrew launched her little ark, 
Faith never to God's keeping gave 

So great a hope, so frail a bark. 

silent river of the South, 

Whose lonely stream ne'er felt the oar 



234 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

In all its course, from rise to mouth, 

What precious freight was that you bore ! 

The grizzled oak and tall dark pine 

Stretch out their boughs, from either bank, 

Across the stream, and many a vine 
Festoons them with luxuriance rank. 

The yellow jasmine fills the shade 

With golden light, and downward shed, 

From slender wreaths that lightly swayed, 
Her fragrant stars upon his head. 

But still the boat, from dawn to dark, 
'Neath overhanging shrubs was drawn ; 

And, loosed at eve, the little bark 
Safe floated on from dark to dawn. 

At length, in that mysterious hour 
That comes before the break of day, 

The current gained a swifter power, 
The boat began to rock and sway. 

He felt the wave beneath him swell, 
His nostrils drank a fresh salt breath, 

The boat of rushes rose and fell : 
" Lord ! is it life or is it death 1 " 

He saw the eastern heaven spanned 
With a slow-spreading belt of gray ; 

Tents glimmered, ghost-like, on the sand ; 
And phantom ships before him lay. 

The sky grew bright, the day awoke, 
The sun flashed up above the sea, 

From countless drum and bugle broke 
The joyous Northern reveille. 



THE IDIOT BOY. 235 

white-winged warriors of the deep ! 

No heart e'er hailed you so before ; 
No castaway on desert steep, 

Nor banished man, his exile o'er, 

Nor drowning wretch lashed to a spar, 

So blessed your rescuing sails as he 
Who on them first beheld from far 

The morning light of Liberty ! 



THE IDIOT BOY. — Southey. 

IT had pleased God to form poor Ned 
A thing of idiot mind, 
Yet to the poor, unreasoning boy 
God had not been unkind. 

Old Sarah loved her helpless child, 
Whom helplessness made dear, 

And life was everything to him 
Who knew no hope or fear. 

She knew his wants, she understood, 

Each half-artic'late call, 
For he was everything to her, 

And she to him was all. 

And so for many a year they lived, 

Nor knew a wish beside ; 
But age at length on Sarah came, 

And she fell sick and died. 

He tried in vain to waken her, 
He called her o'er and o'er ; 



236 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

They told him she was dead, — the word 
To him no import bore. 

They closed her eyes and shrouded her, 
Whilst he stood wondering by, 

And when they bore her to the grave 
He followed silently. 

They laid her in the narrow house, 
And sung the funeral stave, 

And when the mournful train dispersed 
He loitered by the grave. 

The rabble boys that used to jeer 
Whene'er they saw poor Ned, 

Now stood and watched him at the grave, 
And not a word was said. 

They came and went and came again, 
And night at last drew on ; 

Yet still he lingered at the place 
Till every one had gone. 

And when he found himself alone 
He quick removed the clay, 

And raised the coffin in his arms 
And bore it quick away. 

Straight went he to his mother's cot 

And laid it on the floor, 
And with the eagerness of joy 

He barred the cottage door. 

At once he placed his mother's corpse 

Upright within her chair, 
And then he heaped the hearth and blew 

The kindling fire with care. 



THE MAD ENGINEER. 237 

She was now in her wonted chair, 

It was her wonted place, 
And bright the fire blazed and flashed, 

Reflected from her face. 

Then, bending down, he 'd feel her hands, 

Anon her face behold ; 
" Why, mother, do you look so pale, 

And why are you so cold ] " 

And when the neighbors on next morn 

Had forced the cottage door, 
Old Sarah's corpse was in the chair, 

And Ned's was on the floor. 

It had pleased God from this poor boy 

His only friend to call ; 
Yet God was not unkind to him, 

For death restored him all. 



THE MAD ENGINEER. 

THIS thrilling story is furnished by a Prussian railroad 
conductor. 
My train left Dantzic in the morning generally about eight 
o'clock ; but once a week we had to wait for the arrival of the 
steamer from Stockholm. It was the morning of the steam- 
er's arrival that I came down from the hotel and found that 
my engineer had been so seriously injured that he could not 
perform his work. A railway-carriage had run over him, and 
broken one of his legs. I went immediately to the engine- 
house to procure another engineer, for I knew there were three 
or four in reserve there, but I was disappointed. I inquired 
for Westphal, but was informed that he had gone to Sreegen 
to see his mother. Gondolpho had been sent to Konigsberg, 



238 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

on the road. But where was Mayne ? He had leave of absence 
for two days, and had gone no one knew whither. 

Here was a fix. I heard the puffing of the steamer, and 
the passengers would be on hand in fifteen minutes. I ran 
to the guards and asked them if they knew where there was 
an engineer, but they did not. I then went to the firemen 
and asked them if any one of them felt competent to run the 
engine to Bromberg. No one dared to attempt it. The dis- 
tance was nearly one hundred miles. What was to be done 1 

The steamer stopped at the wharf, and those who were going 
on by rail came flocking to the station. They had eaten 
breakfast on board the boat, and were all ready for a fresh 
start. The baggage was checked and registered, the tickets 
bought, the different carriages assigned to the various classes 
of passengers, and the passengers themselves seated. The 
train was in readiness in the long station-house, and the 
engine was steaming and puffing away impatiently in the 
distant firing-house. 

It was past nine o'clock. 

" Come, why don't we start 1 " growled an old fat Swede, 
who had been watching me narrowly for the last fifteen 
minutes. 

And upon this there was a general chorus of anxious 
inquiry, which soon settled to downright murmuring. At 
this juncture some one touched me on the elbow. I turned 
and saw a stranger by my side. I expected that he was 
going to remonstrate with me for my backwardness. In 
fact, I began to have strong temptations to pull off my 
uniform, for every anxious eye was fixed upon the glaring 
badges which marked me as the chief officer of the train. 

However, this stranger was a middle-aged man, tall and 
stout, with a face of great energy and intelligence. His eye 
was black and brilliant, — so brilliant that I could not for the 
life of me gaze steadily into it ; and his lips, which were very 
thin, seemed more like polished marble than human flesh. 
His dress was black throughout, and not only set w r ith exact 
nicety, but was scrupulously clean and neat. 



THE MAD ENGINEER. 239 

"You want an engineer, I understand," he said, in a low, 
cautious tone, at the same time gazing quietly about him, as 
though he wanted no one to hear what he said. 

" I do," I replied. " My train is all ready, and we have no 
engineer within twenty miles of this place." 

" Well, sir, I am going to Bromberg \ I must go, and I will 
run the engine for you ! " 

" Ha ! " I uttered, " are you an engineer % " 

" I am, sir, — one of the oldest in the country, — and am 
now on my way to make arrangements for a great improve- 
ment I have iu vented for the application of steam to a locomo- 
tive. My name is Martin Kroller. If you wish, I will run 
as far as Bromberg; and I will show you running that is 
running." 

Was I not fortunate 1 I determined to accept the man's 
offer at once, and so I told him. He received my answer with 
a nod and a smile. I went with him to the house, where we 
found the iron-horse in charge of the fireman, and all ready 
for a start. Kroller got upon the platform, and I followed 
him. I had never seen a man betray such peculiar aptness 
amid machinery as he did. He let on the steam in an instant, 
but yet with care and judgment, and he backed up to the bag- 
gage-carriage with the most exact nicety. I had seen enough 
to assure me that he was thoroughly acquainted with the 
business, and I felt composed once more. I gave my engine 
up to the new man, and then hastened away to the office. 
Word was passed for all the passengers to take their seats, 
and soon afterward I waved my hand to the engineer. There 
was a puff, — a groaning of the heavy axletrees, — a trembling 
of the building, — and the train was in motion. I leaped upon 
the platform of the guard-carriage, and in a few minutes more 
the station-house was far behind us. 

In less than an hour we reached Dirsham, where we took 
up the passengers that had come on the Konigsberg railway. 
Here I went forward and asked Kroller how he liked the 
engine. He replied that he liked it very much. 

" But," he added, with a strange sparkling of the eye, "wait 



240 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

until T get my improvement, and then you will see travelling. 
By the soul of the Virgin Mother, sir, I could run an engine 
of my construction to the moon in four-and-twenty hours ! " 

I smiled at what I thought his enthusiasm, and then went 
back to my station. As soon as the Konigsberg passengers 
were all on board, and their baggage-carriage attached, we 
started on again. Soon after, I went into the guard-carriage, 
and sat down. An early train from Konigsberg had been 
through two hours before reaching Bromberg, and that was 
at Little Oscue, where we took on board the Western mail. 

" How we go ! " uttered one of the guard, some fifteen 
minutes after we had left Dirsham. 

" The new engineer is trying the speed," I replied, not yet 
having any fear. 

But erelong I began to apprehend he was running a little 
too fast. The carriages began to sway to and fro, and I could 
hear exclamations of fright from the passengers. 

" Good heavens ! " cried one of the guard, coming in at 
that moment, " what is that fellow doing 1 Look, sir, and 
see how we are going." 

I looked at the window, and found that we were dashing 
along at a speed never before travelled on that road. Posts, 
fences, rocks, and trees flew by in one undistinguished mass, 
and the carriages now swayed fearfully. I started to my feet, 
and met a passenger on the platform. He was one of the 
chief owners of our road, and was just on his way to Berlin. 
He was pale and excited. 

" Sir," he gasped, " is Martin Kroller on the engine ? " 

" Yes," I told him. 

" Holy Virgin ! did n't you know him 1 " 

"Know]" I repeated, somewhat puzzled; "what do you 
mean ? He told me his name was Kroller, and that he was 
an engineer. We had no one to run the engine, and — " 

" You took him ! " interrupted the man. " Good heavens, 
sir, he is as crazy as a man can be ! He turned his brain 
over a new plan for applying steam power. I saw him at the 
station, but did not fully recognize him, as I was in a hurry. 



THE MAD ENGINEER. 241 

Just now one of your passengers told me that your engineers 
were all gone this morning, and that you found one that was 
a stranger to you. Then I knew that the man whom I had 
seen was Martin Kroller. He had escaped from the hospital 
at Stettin. You must get him off somehow." 

The whole fearful truth was now open to me. The speed 
of the train was increasing every moment, and I knew that a 
few more miles per hour would launch us all into destruction. 
I called to the guard, and then made my way forward as quick 
as possible. I reached the after platform of the after tender, 
and there stood Kroller upon the engine-board, his hat and 
coat off, his long black hair floating wildly in the wind, 
his shirt unbuttoned at the front, his sleeves rolled up, with 
a pistol in his teeth, and thus glaring upon the fireman, who 
lay motionless upon the fuel. The furnace was stuffed till 
the very latch of the door was red hot, and the whole engine 
was quivering and swaying as though it would shiver to pieces. 

11 Kroller ! Kroller ! " I cried at the top of my voice. 

The crazy engineer started and caught the pistol in his 
Aand. 0, how those great black eyes glared, and how ghastly 
and frightful the face looked ! 

" Ha ! ha ! ha ! " he yelled demoniacally, glaring upon me 
Jike a roused lion. 

" They swore that I could not make it ! But see ! see ! 
See my new power ! See my new engine ! I made it, and 
they are jealous of me ! I made it, and when it was 
done, they stole it from me. But I have found it ! For 
years I have been wandering in search of my great en- 
gine, and they swore it was not made. But I have found 
it ! I knew it r-his morning when I saw it at Dantzic, and I 
was determined to have it. And I 've got it } Ho ! ho ! ho ! 
we 're on the way to the moon, I say ! By the Virgin Mother, 
we '11 be in the moon in four-and-twenty hours. Down, 
down, villain ! If you move, I '11 shoot you." 

This was spoken to the poor fireman, who at that moment 
attempted to rise, and the frightened man sank back again. 

" Here 's Little Oscue just before us ! " cried out one of the 



242 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

guard. But even as he spoke the buildings were at hand. 
A sickening sensation settled upon my heart, for I supposed 
that we were now gone. The houses flew by like lightning. 
I knew if the officers here had turned the switch as usual, we 
should be hurled into eternity in one fearful crash. I saw a 
flash, — it was another engine, — I closed my eyes ; but still 
we thundered on ! The officers had seen our speed, and, 
knowing that we would not head up in that distance, 
they had changed the switch, so that we went forward. 

But there was sure death ahead, if we did not stop. Only 
fifteen miles from us was the town of Schwartz, on the Vis- 
tula ; and at the rate we were going we should be there in a 
few minutes, for each minute carried us over a mile. The 
shrieks of the passengers now rose above the crash of the 
rails, and more terrific than all else arose the demoniac yells 
of the mad engineer. 

" Merciful heavens ! " gasped the guardsman, " there 's not 
a moment to lose; Schwartz is close. But hold," he added; 
"let 's shoot him." 

At that moment a tall, stout German student came over 
the platform where we stood, and we saw that the madman 
had his heavy pistol aimed at us. He grasped a huge stick 
of wood, and, with a steadiness of nerve which I could not have 
commanded, he hurled it with such force and precision that he 
knocked the pistol from the maniac's hand. I saw the move- 
ment, and on the instant that the pistol fell I sprang forward, 
and the German followed me. I grasped the man by the arm ; 
but I should have been nothing in his mad power, had I been 
alone. He would have hurled me from the platform, had not 
the student at that moment struck him upon the head with a 
stick of w T ood which he caught as he came over the tender. 

Kroller settled down like a dead man, and on the next 
instant I shut off the steam and opened the valve. As the 
freed steam shrieked and howled in its escape, the speed 
began to decrease, and in a few minutes more the danger 
was passed. As I settled back, entirely overcome by the wild 
emotions that had raged within me, we began to turn the 



THE MAD ENGINEER. 243 

river; and before I was fairly recovered, the fireman had 
stopped the train in the station-house at Schwartz. 

Martin Kroller, still insensible, was taken from the plat- 
form j and, as we carried him to the guard-room, one of the 
guard recognized him, and told us that he had been there 
about two weeks before. 

" He came," said the guard, " and swore that an engine 
which stood near by was his. He said it was one he had made 
to go to the moon in, and that it had been stolen from him. 
We sent for more help to arrest him, and he fled." 

" "Well," I replied with a shudder, " I wish he had ap- 
proached me in the same way ; but he was more cautious at 
Dantzic." 

At Schwartz we found an engineer to run the engine to 
Bromberg ; and having taken out the Western mail for the 
next Northern mail to carry along, we saw that Kroller would 
be properly attended to, and then started on. 

The rest of the trip we ran in safety, though I could see 
the passengers were not wholly at ease, and w T ould not be until 
they were entirely clear of the railway. A heavy purse was 
made up by them for the German student, and he accepted it 
with much gratitude, and I was glad of it ; for the current 
of gratitude to him may have prevented a far different cur- 
rent of feeling which might have poured upon my head for 
having engaged a madman to run a railroad train. 

But this is not the end. Martin Kroller remained insen- 
sible from the effects of the blow nearly two weeks ; and 
when he recovered from that, he was sound again, his 
insanity was all gone. I saw him about three weeks after- 
ward, but he had no recollection of me. He remembered 
nothing of the past year, not even his mad freak on my 
engine. 

But I remembered it, and I remember it still ; and the peo- 
ple need never fear that I shall be imposed upon again by a 
crazy engineer. 



244 



PUBLIC AND PARLOE READINGS. 



ROCK ME TO SLEEP.— Mrs. Akers. 



BACKWARD, turn backward, Time, in your flight* 
Make me a child again, just for to-night ! 
Mother, come back from the echoless shore, 
Take me again to your heart as of yore, — 
Kiss from my forehead the furrows of care, 
Smooth the few silver threads out of my hair, 
Over my slumbers your loviug watch keep, — 
Rock me to sleep, mother, — rock me to sleep ! 

Backward, flow backward, tide of the years / 
I am so weary of toil and of tears, — 
Toil without recompense, tears all in vain — 
Take them and gi\e me my childhood again ! 
I have grown weary of dust and decay, 
Weary of flinging my soul-wealth away, — 
Weary of sowing for others to reap ; — 
Rock me to sleep, mother, — rock me to sleep ! 

Tired of the hollow, the base, the untrue, 
Mother, mother, my heart calls for you ! 
Many a summer the grass has grown green, 
Blossomed and faded — our faces between — 
Yet with strong yearning and passionate pain, 
Long I to-night for your presence again ; 
Come from the silence so long and so deep, — . 
Rock me to sleep, mother, — rock me to sleep \ 

Over my heart in the days that are flown 
No love like mother-love ever has shone, — 
No other worship abides and endures, 
Faithful, unselfish, and patient like yours, — 
None like a mother can charm away pain 
From the sick soul and world-weary brain ; 
Slumber's soft calm o'er my heavy lids creep, -» 
Rock me to sleep, mother, — rock me to sleep \ 



THE BRIDGE OF SIGHS. 245 

Come, let your brown hair, just lighted with gold, 
Fall on your shoulders again as of old, — 
Let it drop over my forehead to-night, 
Shading my faint eyes away from the light ! 
For, with its sunny-edged shadows once more, 
Haply will throng the visions of yore, 
Lovingly, softly, its bright billows sweep, — 
Rock me to sleep, mother, — rock me to sleep ! 

Mother, dear mother ! the years have been long 
Since last I listened your lullaby song. 
Sing, then, and unto my soul it shall seem 
Womanhood's years have been only a dream ; 
Clasped to your heart in a loving embrace, 
With your light lashes just sweeping my face, 
Never hereafter to wake or to weep, 
Rock me to sleep, mother, — rock me to sleep ! 



THE BRIDGE OF SIGHS. — Hood. 

*' Drowned ! drowned ! " — Hamlet. 

ONE more unfortunate, 
Weary of breath, 
Rashly importunate, 
Gone to her death ! 

Take her up tenderly, 
Lift her with care ; 
Fashioned so slenderly, 
Young, and so fair ! 

Look at her garments 
Clinging like cerements, 
Whilst the wave constantly 
Drips from her clothing ; 



246 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Take her up instantly, 
Loving, not loathing. 

Touch her not scornfully ; 
Think of her mournfully, 
Gently and humanly, — 
Not of the stains of her ; 
All that remains of her 
Now is pure womanly. 

Make no deep scrutiny 
Into her mutiny, 
Rash and undutiful ; 
Past all dishonor, 
Death has left on her 
Only the beautiful. 

Still, for all slips of hers, — 
One of Eve's family, — 
Wipe those poor lips of hers 
Oozing so clammily. 

Loop up her tresses 
Escaped from the comb, — 
Her fair auburn tresses, — 
Whilst wonderment guesses 
Where was her home ^ 

Who was her father % 
Who was her mother % 
Had she a sister? 
Had she a brother 1 
Or was there a dearer one 
Still, and a nearer one 
Yet, than all other 1 

Alas for the rarity 
Of Christian charity 



THE BRIDGE OF SIGHS. 247 

Under the sun ! 
Oh, it was pitiful ! 
Near a whole city full, 
Home she had none. 

Sisterly, brotherly, 
Fatherly, motherly 
Feelings had changed : 
Love, by harsh evidence, 
Thrown from its eminence ; 
Even God's providence 
Seeming estranged. 

Where the lamps quiver 
So far in the river, 
With many a light 
From window and casement, 
From garret to basement, 
She stood with amazement, 
Houseless by night. 

The bleak winds of March 
Made her tremble and shiver ', 
But not the dark arch, 
Or the black flowing river ; 
Mad from life's history, 
Glad to death's mystery, 
Swift to be hurled — 
Anywhere, anywhere 
Out of the world ! 

In she plunged boldly, — 
No matter how coldly 
The rough river ran, — 
Picture it, — think of it, 
Dissolute man ! 



248 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Lave in it, drink of it, 
Then, if you can. 

Take her up tenderly, 
Lift her with care ; 
Fashioned so slenderly, 
Young, and so fair ! 

« 
Ere her limbs frigidly 
Stiffen too rigidly, 
Decently, kindly, 
Smooth and compose them ; 
And her eyes, close them, 
Staring so blindly ! 
Dreadfully staring, 
Through muddy impurity r 
As when with the daring 
Last look of despairing 
Fixed on futurity ! 

Perishing gloomily, 
Spurred by contumely, 
Cold inhumanity, 
Burning insanity, 
Into her rest ! 
Cross her hands humbly, 
As if praying dumbly, 
Over her breast ! 

Owning her weakness, 
Her evil behavior, 
And leaving, with meekness, 
Her sins to her Saviour ! 



MONA'S WATERS. 249 



MONA'S WATERS. 

O MONA'S waters are blue and bright 
When the sun shines out like a gay young lover ; 
But Mona's waves are dark as night 

When the face of heaven is clouded over. 
The wild wind drives the crested foam 

Far up the steep and rocky mountain, 
And booming echoes drown the voice, 
The silvery voice, of Mona's fountain. 

Wild, wild, against that mountain's side 

The wrathful waves were up and beating, 
When stern Glenvarloch's chieftain came ; 

With anxious brow, and hurried greeting, 
He bade the widowed mother send, 

(While loud the tempest's voice was raging,) 
Her fair young son across the flood, 

Where winds and waves their strife were waging. 

And still that fearful mother prayed, 

" yet delay, delay till morning, 
For weak the hand that guides our bark, 

Though brave his heart, all danger scorning.'' 
Little did stern Glenvarloch heed : 

" The safety of my fortress tower 
Depends on tidings he must bring 

From Fairlee bank, within the hour. 

" See'st thou, across the sullen wave, 

A blood-red banner, wildly streaming % 
That flag a message brings to me 

Of which my foes are little dreaming. 
The boy must put his boat across 

(Gold shall repay his hour of danger), 
And bring me back, with care and speed, 

Three letters from the light-browed stranger.'- 



250 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

The orphan boy leaped lightly in ; 

Bold was his eye and brow of beauty, 
And bright his smile as thus he spoke : 

" I do but pay a vassal's duty ; 
Fear not for me, mother dear ; 

See how the boat the tide is spurning ; 
The storm will cease, the sky will clear, 

And thou wilt watch me safe returning. ,, 

His bark shot on, — now up, now down, 

Over the waves, — the snowy-crested ; 
Now like a dart it sped along, 

Now like a white-winged sea-bird rested ; 
And ever when the wind sank low, 

Smote on the ear that woman's wailing, 
As long she watched, with streaming eyes, 

That fragile bark's uncertain sailing. 

He reached the shore, — the letters claimed ; 

Triumphant, heard the stranger's wonder 
That one so young should brave alone 

The heaving lake, the rolling thunder. 
And once again his snowy sail 

Was seen by her, — that mourning mother ; 
And once she heard his shouting voice, — 

That voice *the waves were soon to smother. 

Wild burst the wind, wide napped the sail, 

A crashing peal of thunder followed ; 
The gust swept o'er the water's face, 

And caverns in the deep lake hollowed. 
The gust swept past, the waves grew calm, 

The thunder died along the mountain ; 
But where was he who used to play, 

On sunny days, by Mona's fountain ] 

His cold corpse floated to the shore 

Where knelt his lone and shrieking mother ; 



MONA'S WATERS. 251 

And bitterly she wept for him, 

The widow's son, wjio had no brother ! 
She raised his arm, — the hand was closed ; 

With pain his stiffened fingers parted, 
And on the sand three letters dropped ! — 

His last dim thought, — the faithful-hearted. 

Glenvarloch gazed, and on his brow 

Remorse with pain and grief seemed blending ; 
A purse of gold he flung beside 

That mother, o'er her dead child bending. 
0, wildly laughed that woman then, 

" Glenvarloch ! would. ye dare to measure 
The holy life that God has given 

Against a heap of golden treasure 1 

" Ye spurned my prayer, for we were poor ; 

But know, proud man, that God hath power 
To smite the king on Scotland's throne, 

The chieftain in his fortress tower. 
Frown on ! frown on ! I fear ye not ; 

We 've done the last of chieftain's bidding, 
And cold he lies, for whose young sake 

I used to bear your wrathful chiding. 

" Will gold bring back his cheerful voice 

That used to win my heart from sorrow 1 
Will silver warm the frozen blood, 

Or make my heart less lone to-morrow 1 
Go back and seek your mountain home, 

And when ye kiss your fair-haired daughter 
Remember him who died to-night 

Beneath the waves of Mona's water." 

Old years rolled on, and new ones came, — 
Foes dare not brave Glenvarloch's tower ; 

But naught could bar the sickness out 
That stole within fair Annie's bower. 



252 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

The o'erblown floweret in the sun 

Sinks languid down, and withers daily, 

And so she sank, her voice grew faint, 
Her laugh no longer sounded gayly. 

Her step fell on the old oak floor 

As noiseless as the snow-shower's drifting ; 
And from her sweet and serious eyes 

They seldom saw the dark lid lifting. 
" Bring aid ! bring aid ! " the father cries ; 

" Bring aid ! " each vassal's voice is crying ; 
" The fair-haired beauty of the isles, 

Her pulse is faint, — her life is flying ! " 

He called in vain ; her dim eyes turned 

And met his own with parting sorrow, 
For well she knew, that fading girl, 

That he must weep and wail the morrow. 
Her faint breath ceased ; the father bent 

And gazed upon his fair-haired daughter. 
What thought he on 1 The widow's son, 

And the stormy night by Mona's water. 



HIGHER VIEWS OF THE UNION. — Wendell Phillips. 

I CONFESS the pictures of the mere industrial value of the 
Union make me profoundly sad. I look, as beneath the 
skilful pencil trait after trait leaps to glowing life, and ask at 
last, Is this all 1 Where are the nobler elements of national 
purpose and life 1 Is this the whole fruit of ages of toil, sac- 
rifice, and thought, — those cunning fingers, the overflowing lap, 
labor vocal on every hillside, and commerce whitening every 
sea] All the dower of one haughty, overbearing race, the 
zeal of the Puritan, the faith of the Quaker, a century of 
colonial health, and then this large civilization, — does it result 



HIGHER VIEWS OF THE UNION. 253 

only in a workshop, — fops melted in baths and perfumed, 
and men grimed with toil ? Raze out, then, the Eagle from 
our banner, and paint instead Niagara used as a cotton- 
mill! 

no ! not such the picture my glad heart sees when I look 
forward. Once plant deep in the national heart the love of 
right, let there grow out of it the firm purpose of duty, and 
then from the higher plane of Christian manhood we can put 
aside, on the right hand and the left, these narrow, childish, 
and mercenary considerations. 

" Leave to the soft Campanian 

His baths and his perfumes ; 
Leave to the sordid race of Tyre 

Their dyeing vats and looms ; 
Leave to the sons of Carthage 

The rudder and the oar, 
Leave to the Greek his marble nymph 

And scrolls of wordy lore " ; — 

but for us, the children of a purer civilization, the pioneers 
of a Christian future, it is for us to found a Capitol whose 
corner-stone is Justice, and whose top-stone is Liberty ; with- 
in the sacred precinct of whose Holy of Holies dwelleth One 
who is no respecter of persons, but hath made of one blood 
all nations of the earth to serve him. 

Crowding to the shelter of its stately arches, I see old and 
young, learned and ignorant, rich and poor, native and for- 
eign, Pagan, Christian, and Jew, black and white, in one glad, 
harmonious, triumphant procession ! 

"Blest and thrice blest the Roman 

Who sees Rome's brightest day ; 
Who sees that long victorious pomp 

Wind down the sacred way, 
And through the bellowing Forum, 

And round the suppliant's Grove, 
Up to the everlasting gates 

Of Capitolian Jove ! " 



254 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 



THE BELLS. — Edgab A. Poe. 

HEAR the sledges with the bells, — 
Silver bells ! 
What a world of merriment their melody foretells ! 
How they tinkle, tinkle, tinkle, 

In the icy air of night ! 
While the stars that oversprinkle 
All the heavens seem to twinkle 

With a crystalline delight ; 
Keeping time, time, time, 
In a sort of Runic rhyme, 
To the tintinabulation that so musically wells 
From the bells, bells, bells, bells, 
Bells, bells, bells, — 
From the jingling and the tinkling of the bells. 

Hear the mellow wedding bells, — 
Golden bells ! 
What a world of happiness their harmony foretells ! 
Through the balmy air of night 
How they ring out their delight ! 
From the molten-golden notes, 

And all in tune, 
What a liquid ditty floats 
To the turtle-dove that listens, while she gloats 

On the moon ! 
0, from out the sounding cells, 
What a gush of euphony voluminously wells ! 
How it swells ! 
How it dwells 
On the Future ! how it tells 
Of the rapture that impels 
To the swinging and the ringing 

Of the bells, bells, bells, 
Of the bells, bells, bells, bells, 



THE BELLS. 255 

Bells, bells, bells, — 
To the rhyming and the chiming of the bells ! 

Hear the loud alarum bells, — 
Brazen bells ! 
What a tale of terror, now, their turbulency tells ! 
In the startled ear of night 
How they scream out their affright ! 
Too much horrified to speak, 
They can only shriek, shriek, 
Out of tune, 
In a clamorous appealing to the mercy of the fire, 
In a mad expostulation with the deaf and frantic fire, 
Leaping higher, higher, higher, 
With a desperate desire, 
And a resolute endeavor 
Now — now to sit or never, 
By the side of the pale-faced moon. 
the bells, bells, bells, 
What a tale their terror tells, 
Of Despair ! 
How they clang and clash and roar ! 
What a horror they outpour 
On the bosom of the palpitating air ! 
Yet the ear it fully knows, 
By the twanging, 
And the clanging, 
How the danger ebbs and flows ; 
Yet the ear distinctly tells, 
In the jangling, 
And the wrangling, 
How the danger sinks and swells, 
fey the sinking or the swelling in the anger of the bells, — 
Of the bells, — 
Of the bells, bells, bells, bells, 
Bells, bells, bells, — 
In the clamor and the clangor of the bells ! 



256 PUBLIC AND PAKLOR READINGS. 

Hear the tolling of the bells, — 
Iron bells ! 
What a world of solemn thought their monody compels ! 
In the silence of the night, 
How we shiver with affright 
At the melancholy menace of their tone ! 
For every sound that floats 
From the rust within their throats 

Is a groan. 
And the people — ah, the people — » 
They that dwell up in the steeple, 

All alone, 
And who tolling, tolling, tolling, 

In that muffled monotone, 
Feel a glory in so rolling 

On the human heart a stone, — 
They are neither man nor woman, 
They are neither brute nor human, 

They are Ghouls : 
And their king it is who tolls ; 
And he rolls, rolls, rolls, 
Rolls, 
A psean from the bells, — 
And his merry bosom swells 

With the psean of the bells ! 
And he dances and he yells ; 
Keeping time, time, time, 
In a sort of Runic rhyme, 
To the psean of the bells, — 
Of the bells : 
Keeping time, time, time, 
In a sort of Runic rhyme, 

To the throbbing of the bells, — - 
Of the bells, bells, bells, — 

To the sobbing of the bells ; 
Keeping time, time, time, 
As he knells, knells, knells, 



THE DRUM-CALL IN 18C1. 257 

In a happy Runic rhyme, 

To the rolling of the bells, — ■ 
Of the bells, bells, bells, 

To the tolling of the bells, 
Of the bells, bells, bells, bells, 
Bells, bells, bells, — 
To the moaning and the groaning of the bells* 



THE DRUM-CALL IN 1861. — E. J. Cutler. 

THE drum's wild roll awakes the land; the fife is calling 
shrill; 
Ten thousand starry banners blaze on town and bay and hill ; 
The thunders of the rising war drown Labor's peaceful hum, 
And heavy to the ground the first dark drops of battle come. 

"Wake, sons of heroes, wake ! The age of heroes dawns again ; 
Truth takes in hand her ancient sword, and calls her loyal men. 
Lo ! brightly o'er the breaking day shines Freedom's holy 

star; 
Peace cannot cure the sickly time. All hail the healer, 

War! 

That voice the Empire City heard ; 't was heard in Boston Bay; 
Then to the lumber-camps of Maine sped on its eager way. 
Over the breezy prairie lands, by bluff and lake it went, 
To where the Mississippi shapes the plastic continent ; 
Then on, by cabin and by fort, by stony wastes and sands, 
It rang exultant down the sea where the Golden City stands. 
And wheresoe'er the summons came, there rose an angry din, 
As when upon a rocky coast a stormy tide sets in. 

Sweet is the praise of harvest-home, of sylvan haunts and 
brooks, 



258 PUBLIC AND PAKLOR READINGS. 

Of red swords into ploughshares beat, of spears to pruning- 

hooks, 
Of the long splendor of the Arts the fervid years disclose ; 
But mid the victories of Peace, the heart a-straying goes. 

But sweeter than the song of Peace, the ringing battle-shout, — 
When Error's thistle-calyx bursts, Truth's purple blossoms 

out; 
And lovelier than the waving grain, the battle-flag unfurled 
Amid the din of trump and drum to lead the onward world ! 
Then mothers, sisters, daughters ! spare the tears you fain 

would shed. 
Who seem to die in such a cause, you cannot call them dead ! 
0, length of days is not a boon the brave man prayeth for ! 
There are a thousand evils worse than death or any war : 
Oppression, with his iron strength fed on the souls of men ; 
And License, with the hungry brood that kennel in his den. 
But Law, the form of Liberty ! God's light is on thy brow ; 
And Liberty, the soul of Law ! God's very self art thou. 
Divine ideas ! we write your names across our banner's fold ; 
For you the sluggard's brain is fire, for you the coward bold. 
Fair daughter of the bleeding Past ! Bright hope the Prophets 

saw ! 
God give us Law in Liberty, and Liberty in Law ! 

Hurrah ! the drums are beating ; the fife is calling shrill ; 
Ten thousand starry banners flame on town and bay and 

hill; 
The thunders of the rising war hush Labor's drowsy hum ; 
Thank God that we have lived to see the saffron morning 

come ! — 
The morning of the battle-call, to every soldier dear. 
joy ! the cry is " Forward ! " joy ! the foe is near ! 
For all the crafty men of peace have failed to purge the land. 
Hurrah ! the ranks of battle close ; God takes his cause in 

hand! 



THE GALLEY-SLAVE. 259 



THE GALLEY-SLAVE. — Henry Abbey. 

THERE lived in France, in days not long now dead, 
A farmer's sons, twin brothers, like in face ; 
And one was taken in the other's stead 

For a small theft, and sentenced in disgrace 
To serve for years a hated galley-slave, 

Yet said no word his prized good name to save. 

Trusting remoter days would be more blessed, 

He set his will to wear the verdict out, 
And knew most men are prisoners at best 

Who some strong habit ever drag about, 
Like chain and ball ; then meekly prayed that he 
Rather the prisoner he was should be. 

But best resolves are of such feeble thread, 
They may be broken in Temptation's hands. 

After long toil the guiltless prisoner said : 

" Why should I thus, and feel life's precious sands 

The narrow of my glass, the present, run, 

For a poor crime that I have never done 1 " 

Such questions are like cups, and hold reply ; 

For when the chance swung wide the prisoner fled, 
And gained the country road, and hastened by 

Brown furrowed fields and skipping brooklets fed 
By shepherd clouds, and felt 'neath sapful trees 
The soft hand of the mesmerizing breeze. 

Then, all that long day having eaten naught, 
He at a cottage stopped, and of the wife 

A brimming bowl of fragrant milk besought. 
She gave it him ; but as he quaffed the life, 

Down her kind face he saw a single tear 
Pursue its wet and sorrowful career. 



260 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Within the cot he now beheld a man 

And maiden also weeping. " Speak," said he, 

And tell me of your grief ; for if I can, 
I will disroot the sad tear-fruited tree." 

The cotter answered : " In default of rent 

We shall to-morrow from this roof be sent." 

Then said the galley-slave : " Whoso returns 
A prisoner escaped may feel the spur 

To a right action, and deserves and earns 
Proffered' reward. I am a prisoner ! 

Bind these my arms, and drive me back my way, 

That your reward the price of home may pay." 

Against his wish the cotter gave consent, 
And at the prison-gate received his fee, 

Though some made it a thing for wonderment 
That one so sickly and infirm as he, 

When stronger would have dared not to attack, 

Could capture this bold youth and bring him back. 

Straightway the cotter to the mayor hied 
And told him all the story, and that lord 

Was much affected, dropping gold beside 
The pursed sufficient silver of reward ; 

Then wrote his letter in authority, 
Asking to set the noble prisoner free. 

There is no nobler, better life on earth 
Than that of conscious, meek self-sacrifice. 

Such life our Saviour, in his lowly birth 
And holy work, made his sublime disguise, 

Teaching this truth, still rarely understood : 

'T is sweet to suffer for another's good. 



THE DIVER. 261 



THE DIVER. — Schiller. 

" /^ WHERE is the knight or the squire so bold 
V_y As to dive to the howling charybdis below 1 — 

I east into the whirlpool a goblet of gold, 
And o'er it already the dark waters flow ; 

Whoever to me may the goblet bring 

Shall have for his guerdon that gift of his king." 

He spoke, and the cup from the terrible steep 
That, rugged and hoary, hung over the verge 

Of the endless and measureless world of the deep, 
Swirled into the maelstrom that maddened the surge. 

II And where is the diver so stout to go — 
I ask ye again — to the deep below 1 " 

And the knights and the squires that gathered around 
Stood silent, and fixed on the ocean their eyes ; 

They looked on the dismal and savage profound, 

And the peril chilled back every thought of the prize. 

And thrice spoke the monarch, — " The cup to win, 

Is there never a wight w T ho will venture in 1 " 

And all as before heard in silence the king, 

Till a youth with an aspect unfearing but gentle, 

'Mid the tremulous squires, stept out from the ring, 
Unbuckling his girdle, and doffing his mantle ; 

And the murmuring crowd, as they parted asunder, 

On the stately boy cast their looks of wonder. 

As he strode to the marge of the summit, and gav^ 
One glance on the gulf of that merciless main ; 

Lo ! the wave that forever devours the wave 
Casts roaringly up the charybdis again ; 

And, as with the swell of the far thunder-boom, 

Rushes foamingly forth from the heart of the gloom. 






262 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

And it bubbles and seethes, and it hisses and roars, 
As when fire is'with water commixed and contending; 

And the spray of its wrath to the welkin up-soars, 
And flood upon flood hurries on, never ending. 

And it never will rest, nor from travail be free, 

Like a sea that is laboring the birth of a sea. 

And at last there lay open the desolate realm ! 

Through the breakers that whitened the waste of the swell, 
Dark, dark yawned a cleft in the midst of the whelm, 

The path to the heart of that fathomless hell. 
Round and round whirled the waves — deep and deeper still 

driven, 
Like a gorge through the moimtainous main thunder-riven. 

The youth gave his trust to his Maker ! Before 
That path through the riven abyss closed again — 

Hark ! a shriek from the crowd rang aloft from the shore, 
And, behold ! he is whirled in the grasp of the main ! 

And o'er him the breakers mysteriously rolled, 

And the giant-mouth closed on the swimmer so bold. 

O'er the surface grim silence lay dark and profound, 
But the deep from below murmured hollow and fell ; 

And the crowd, as it shuddered, lamented aloud, — 

" Gallant youth, noble heart, fare thee well, fare thee 
well ! " 

And still ever deepening that wail as of woe, 

More hollow the gulf sent its howl from below. 

If thou shouldst in those waters thy diadem fling, 
And cry, " Who may find it shall win it, and wear," 

Gods wot, though the prize were the crown of a king, 
A crown at such hazard were valued too dear. 

For never did lips of the living reveal 

What the deeps that howl yonder in terror conceal. 



THE DIVER. 263 

many a ship, to that breast grappled fast, 

Has gone down to the fearful and fathomless grave ; 

Again, crashed together, the keel and the mast 

To be seen, tossed aloft in the glee of the wave. — 

Like the growth of a storm ever louder and clearer, 

Grows the roar of the gulf rising nearer and nearer. 

And it bubbles and seethes, and it hisses and roars, 
As when fire is with water commixed and contending ; 

And the spray of its wrath to the welkin up-soars, 
And flood upon flood hurries on, never ending ; 

And, as with the swell of the far thunder-boom, 

Rushes roaringly forth from the heart of the gloom. 

And lo ! from the heart of that far-floating gloom 

What gleams on the darkness so swanlike and white 1 

Lo ! an arm and a neck, glancing up from the tomb ! — 
They battle, — the Man's with the Element's might. 

It is he ! it is he ! — in his left hand behold, 

As a sign, as a joy, shines the goblet of gold ! 

And he breathed deep, and he breathed long, 
And he greeted the heavenly delight of the day. 

They gaze on each other ; they shout as they throng, — 
" He lives, — lo, the ocean has rendered its prey ! 

And out of the grave where the Hell began, 

His valor has rescued the living man ! " 

And he comes with the crowd in their clamor and glee, 
And the goblet his daring has won from the water 

He lifts to the king as he sinks on his knee ; 

And the king from her maidens has beckoned his daughter, 

And he bade her the wine to his cup-bearer bring, 

And thus spake the Diver, — " Long life to the king ! 

" Happy they whom the rose-hues of daylight rejoice, 
The air and the sky that to mortals are given ! 



264 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

May the horror below nevermore find a voice, 

Nor man stretch too far the wide mercy of Heaven ! 
Nevermore, nevermore may he lift from the mirror 
The veil which is woven with Night and with Terror ! 

" Quick brightening like lightning, it tore me along, 
Down, down, till the gush of a torrent at play 

In the rocks of its wilderness caught me, and strong 
As the wings of an eagle, it whirled me away. 

Vain, vain were my struggles ; the circle had won me ; 

Round and round in its dance the wild element spun me. 

" And I called on my God, and my God heard my prayer, 
In the strength of my need, in the gasp of my breath, 

And showed me a crag that rose up from the lair, 
And I clung to it, trembling, and baffled the death. 

And, safe in the perils around me, behold, 

On the spikes of the coral, the goblet of gold ! 

"Below, at the foot of that precipice drear, 

Spread the gloomy and purple and pathless obscure, — 

A silence of horror that slept on the ear, 

That the eye more appalled might the horror endure ! 

Salamander, snake, dragon, — vast reptiles that dwell 

In the deep, — coiled about the grim jaws of their hell. 

" Dark crawled, glided dark the unspeakable swarms, 
Like masses unshapen, made life hideously. 

Here clung and here bristled the fashionless forms ; 
Here the hammer-fish darkened the dark of the sea ; 

And with teeth grinning white, and a menacing motion, 

Went the terrible shark, the hyena of ocean. 

" There I hung, and the awe gathered icily o'er me, 

So far from the earth where man's help there was none ; 

The one human thing, with the goblins before me, — 
Alone, in a loneness so ghastly, — Alone ! 



THE DIVER. 265 

Fathom-deep from man's eye in the speechless profound, 
With the death of the main and the monsters around. 

" Methought, as I gazed through the darkness, that now 
A hundred-limbed creature caught sight of its prey, 

And darted — God ! from the far-flaming bough 
Of the coral, I swept on the horrible way ; 

And it seized me, — the wave with its wrath and its roar, — 
It seized me to save, — King, the danger is o'er ! " 

On the youth gazed the monarch, and marvelled ; quoth he, 
" Bold diver, the goblet I promised is thine ; 

And this ring will I give, a fresh guerdon to thee, — 
Never jewels more precious shone up from the mine, — 

If thou 'It bring me fresh tidings, and venture again 

To say what lies hid in the innermost main ! " 

Then outspake the daughter in tender emotion, 

" Ah ! father, my father, what more can there rest 1 

Enough of this sport with the pitiless ocean ; 

He has served thee as none would, thyself has confest. 

If nothing can slake thy wild thirst of desire, 

Be your knights not, at least, put to shame by the squire ! " 

The king seized the goblet ; he swung it on high, 
And, whirling, it fell in the roar of the tide : 

" But bring back that goblet again to my eye, 

And I '11 hold thee the dearest that rides by my side ; 

And thine arms shall embrace as thy bride, I decree, 

The maiden whose pity now pleadeth for thee." 

In his heart, as he listened, there leapt the wild joy, 

And the hope and the love through his eyes spoke in fire. 

On that bloom, on that blush, gazed, delighted, the boy ; 
The maiden she faints at the feet of her sire. 

Here the guerdon divine, there the danger beneath ; 

He resolves ! — To the strife with the life and the death ! 



266 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

They hear the loud surges sweep back in their swell ; 

Their coming the thunder-sound heralds along ! 
Foud eyes yet are tracking the spot where he fell — 

They come, the wild waters in tumult and throng, 
Rearing up to the cliff, roaring back as before ; 
But no wave ever brought the lost youth to the shore. 



DEATH OF LEONLDAS. — Croly. 

IT was the wild midnight, — a storm was in the sky, 
The lightning gave its light, and the thunder echoed by ; 
The torrent swept the glen, the ocean lashed the shore, — 
Then rose the Spartan men, to make their bed in gore ! 

Swift from the deluged ground three hundred took the shield ; 
* Then, silent, gathered round the leader of the field. 
He spoke no warrior-word, he bade no trumpet blow ; 
But the signal thunder roared, and they rushed upon the foe. 

The fiery element showed, with one mighty gleam, 
Rampart and flag and tent, like the spectres of a dream; 
All up the mountain side, all down the woody vale, 
All by the rolling tide, waved the Persian banners pale. 

And King Leonidas, among the slumbering band, 
Sprang foremost from the pass, like the lightning's living brand; 
Then double darkness fell, and the forest ceased to moan, 
But there came a clash of steel, and a distant dying groan. 

Anon, a trumpet blew, and a fiery sheet burst high, 

That o'er the midnight threw a blood-red canopy : 

A host glared on the hill, a host glared by the bay ; 

But the Greeks rushed onward still, like leopards in their play. 



DEATH OF LEONID AS. 267 

The air was all a yell, and the earth was all a flame, 
Where the Spartan's bloody steel on the silken turbans came ; 
And still the Greeks rushed on, beneath the fiery fold, 
Till, like a rising sun, shone Xerxes' tent of gold. 

They found a royal feast, his midnight banquet, there ! 
And the treasures of the East lay beneath the Doric spear ; 
Then sat to the repast the bravest of the brave, — 
That feast must be their last, that spot must be their grave ! 

They pledged old Sparta's name in cups of Syrian wine, 
And the warrior's deathless fame was sung in strains divine ; 
They took the rose-wreathed lyres from eunuch and from 

slave, 
And taught the languid wires the sounds that Freedom gave. 

But now the morning star crowned (Eta's twilight brow, 
And the Persian horn of war from the hill began to blow ; 
Up rose the glorious rank, to Greece one cup poured high, 
Then, hand in hand, they drank, — "To Immortality ! " 

Fear on King Xerxes fell, when, like spirits from the tomb, 
With shout and trumpet-knell, he saw the warriors come ; 
But down swept all his power, with chariot and with charge, — 
Down poured the arrowy shower, till sank the Dorian targe. 

They marched within the tent, with all their strength unstrung; 
To Greece one look they sent, then on high their torches flung ; 
To heaven the blaze uprolled, like a mighty altar-fire, 
And the Persians' gems and gold were the Grecians' funeral 
pyre. 

Their king sat on his throne, his captains by his side, 
While the flame rushed roaring on, and their paean loud replied ! 
Thus fought the Greek of old ! Thus will he fight again ! 
Shall not the selfsame mould bring forth the selfsame men ? 



268 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 



MY EXPERIENCE IN ELOCUTION. — John Neal. 

IN the academy I attended, elocution was taught in a way 
I never shall forget, — never! We had a yearly exhibi- 
tion, and the favorites of the preceptor were allowed to speak 
a piece ; and a pretty time they had of it. Somehow, I was 
never a favorite with any of my teachers after the first 
two or three days ; and, as I went barefooted, I dare say it 
was thought unseemly, or perhaps cruel, to expose me upon 
the platform. And then, as I had no particular aptitude for 
public speaking, and no relish for what was called oratory, it 
was never my luck to be called up. 

' Among my schoolmates, however, was one, — a very amia- 
ble, shy boy, — to whom was assigned, at the last exhibition 
I attended, that passage in Pope's Homer beginning with 
"Aurora, now fair daughter of the dawn." This the poor 
boy gave with so much emphasis and discretion that, to me, 
it sounded like " roarer ! " and I was wicked enough, out 
of sheer envy I dare say, to call him " roarer ! " ■ — a nick- 
name which clung to him for a long while, though no human 
being ever deserved it less ; for in speech and action both, he 
was quiet, reserved, and sensitive. 

My next experience in elocution was still more dishearten- 
ing, so that I never had a chance of showing what I was 
capable of in that way, till I set up for myself. Master 
Moody, my next instructor, was thought to have uncommon 
qualifications for teaching oratory. He was a large, hand- 
some, heavy man, over six feet high ; and having understood 
that the first, second, and third prerequisite in oratory was 
action, the boys he put in training were encouraged to most 
vehement and obstreperous manifestations. Let me give an 
example, and one that weighed heavily on my conscience for 
many years after the poor man passed away. 

Among his pupils were two boys, brothers, who were 
thought highly gifted in elocution. The master, who was 
evidently of that opinion, had a habit of parading them on 



MY EXPEKIENCB IN ELOCUTION. 269 

all occasions before visitors and strangers; though one had 
lost his upper front teeth and lisped badly, and the other had 
the voice of a penny-trumpet. Week after week, these bo3's 
went through the quarrel of Brutus and Cassius, for the ben- 
efit of myself and others, to see if their example would not 
provoke us to a generous competition for all the honors. 

How it operated on the other boys in after life I cannot 
say ; but the effect on me was decidedly unwholesome — dis- 
couraging, indeed — until I was old enough to judge for my- 
self, and to carry into operation a system of my own ; believ- 
ing that men should always talk — I do not say they should 
talk always — on paper and off, on the platform and at the 
bar, in the senate-chamber and at the dinner-table, — if they 
would not forego all the advantages of experience in private 
life, when they launch into public life. 

On coming to the passage, " Be ready, gods, with all your 
thunderbolts, — dash him in pieces ! " the elder of the two 
gave it after the following fashion : " Be ready, godths, with 
all your thunderbolths, — dath him in pietheth ! " — bringing 
his right fist down into his left palm with all his strength, 
and his lifted foot upon the platform, which was built like a 
sounding-board, so that the master himself, who had sug- 
gested the action, and obliged the poor boy to rehearse it 
over and over again, appeared to be utterly carried away by 
the magnificent demonstration ; while to me — so deficient 
was I in rhetorical taste — it sounded like the crash of broken 
crockery, intermingled with chicken-peeps. 

I never got over it ; and to this day, cannot endure stamp- 
ing, nor even tapping with the foot, nor clapping the hands 
together, nor thumping the table for illustration ; having an 
idea that such noises are not oratory, and that untranslatable 
sounds are not language. 

My next essay was of a somewhat different kind. I took 
the field in person, being in my nineteenth year, well propor- 
tioned, and already beginning to have a sincere relish for 
poetry, if not for declamation. I had always been a great 
reader ; and in the course of my foraging depredations I had 



270 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

met with " The Sailor-Boy's Dream," and " The Lake of the 
Dismal Swamp," both of which I had committed to memory 
before I knew it. 

And one day, happening to be alone with my sister, and 
newly rigged out in a student's gown, such as the lads at 
Brunswick sported when they came to show off among 
their old companions, I proposed to astonish her by rehears- 
ing these two poems in appropriate costume. Being very 
proud of her brother, and very obliging, she consented at 
once, — upon the condition, however, that our dear mother, 
who had never seen anything of the sort, should be invited 
to make one of the audience. 

On the whole, I rather think that I succeeded in astonish- 
ing both. I well remember their looks of amazement — for 
they had never seen anything better or — worse — in all 
their lives, and were no judges of acting — as I swept to and 
fro in that magnificent robe, with outstretched arms and up- 
lifted eyes, when I came to passages like the following, where 
an apostrophe was called for : — 

"And near him the she-wolf stirred the brake, 
And the copper-snake breathed in his ear, 
Till, starting, he cried, from his dream awake, 
1 0, when shall I see the dusky lake, 
And the white canoe of my dear ? ' " 

Or like this : — 

" sailor-boy ! sailor-boy ! peace to thy shade ! 
Around thy white bones the red coral shall grow, 
Of thy fair yellow hair threads of amber be made, 
And every part suit to thy mansion below " ; — 

throwing up my arms, and throwing them out in every pos- 
sible direction as the spirit moved me, or the sentiment 
prompted ; for I always encouraged my limbs and features to 
think for themselves, and to act for themselves, and never 
predetermined — never forethought — a gesture nor an intona- 
tion in all my life ; and should as soon think of counterfeiting 
another's look or step or voice, or of modulating my own by 



THE KINGDOM. 271 

a pitch-pipe, — as the ancient orators did, with whom oratory- 
was acting-elocution, a branch of the dramatic art, — as of 
adopting or imitating the gestures or tones of the most cele- 
brated rhetorician I ever saw. 

The result was quite encouraging. My mother and sister 
were both satisfied. At any rate, they said nothing to the 
contrary. Being only in my nineteenth year, what might I 
not be able to accomplish after a little more experience .1 

H<\w little did I think, while rehearsing before my mother 
and sister, that anything serious would ever come of it, or 
that I was laying the foundations of character for life, or that 
I was beginning what I should not be able to finish within 
the next forty or fifty years following. Yet so it was. I had 
broken the ice without knowing it. These things were but 
the foreshadowing of what happened long afterward. 



THE KINGDOM. — Lizzie Doten. 

'r I 1 WAS the ominous month of October, 
JL How the memories rise in my soul, 

How they swell like a sea in my soul ! — 
When a spirit, sad, silent, and sober, 

WTiose glance was a word of control, 
Drew me down to the black Lake Avernus, 

In the desolate kingdom of Death, — 
To the mist-covered Lake of Avernus, 

In the ghoul-haunted kingdom of Death. 

And there, while I shivered and waited, 
I talked with the souls of the dead ; 

The lawless, the lone, and the hated, 
Who broke from their bondage and fled. 

Each word was a burning eruption, 
That leaped from a crater of flame, — 



272 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

A red lava-tide of corruption, 
That out of life's sediment came 

From the scoriae natures God gave them, 
Compounded of glory and shame. 

" Aboard ! " cried our pilot and leader ; 

Then wildly we rushed to embark, 
And forth, in our ghostly Edida, 

We swept in the silence and dark. 
God ! on that black Lake Avernus, 

Where vampires drink even the breath, 
On that terrible Lake of Avernus, 

Leading down to the whirlpool of death ! 

It was there the Eumenides found us, 

In sight of no shelter or shore, 
They lashed up the white waves around us, - 

We sank in the waters' wild roar. 
But not to the regions infernal, 

Through billows of sulphurous flame, 
But unto the city eternal, 

The home of the blest, we came. 

To the gate of the beautiful city, 

All fainting and weary, we pressed : 
" Heart of the Holy, take pity, 

And welcome us home to our rest ! 
Pursued by the Fates and the Furies, 

In danger and darkness we fled ; 
From the pitiless Fates and the Furies, 

Through the desolate realms of the dead." 

Like the song of a bird that yet lingers, 
Like the wind-harp by ^Eolus blown, 

As if touched by the lightest of fingers, 
Wide open the portals were thrown. 



THE KINGDOM. 273 

And there, in a mystical splendor, 

Stood a golden-haired, azure-eyed, child ; 
With a look that was touching and tender 

She stretched forth her white hand and smiled. 
" Ay, welcome ! thrice welcome, poor mortals 1 

0, why do you linger and wait 1 
Come fearlessly in at these portals, 

No warder keeps watch at the gate." 

" Gloria Deo ! Te Deum laudamus I " 

Exclaimed a proud prelate, " I 'm safe into heaven ! 
By the blood of the Lamb, and the martyrs who claim us, 

My soul has been purchased, my sins are forgiven ; 
I tread where the saints and the martyrs have trod, 
Lead on, thou fair child, to the temple of God ! " 

» 
The child stood in silence and wondered, 

And bowed down her beautiful head, 

And even as fragrance is shed 
By the lily the waves have swept under, 

She meekly and tenderly said : 
" In vain do you seek to behold Him ; 

He dwells in no temple apart ; 
The height of the heavens cannot hold him, 

And yet he is here in my heart, — 
He is here, and he will not depart." 

Then forth from the mystical splendor, 

The scintillant, crystalline light, 
Gleamed faces more touching and tender 

Than ever had greeted our sight. 
And they sang, " Welcome home to this kingdom, 

Ye earth-born and serpent-beguiled ! 
The Lord is the light of this kingdom, 

And his temple the heart of a child ! " 
12* 



274 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 



THE SONG OF THE COSSACK TO HIS HOUSE.— 
Beranger. 

Translated by " Father Prout " (Rev. Francis Mahony). 

GOME, arouse thee up, my gallant horse, and bear thy 
rider on ! 
The comrade thou, and the friend, I trow, of the dweller on 

the Don. 
Pillage and Death have spread their wings ! 't is the hour to 

hie thee forth, 
And with thy hoofs an echo wake to the trumpets of the 

North ! 
Nor gems nor gold do men behold upon thy saddle-tree ; 
But earth affords the wealth of lords for thy master and for 

thee. 
Then fiercely neigh, my charger gray ! — thy chest is proud 

and ample ! 
Thy hoofs shall prance o'er the fields of France, and the pride 

of her heroes trample ! 

Europe is weak, — she hath grown old, — her bulwarks are 

laid low ; 
She is loath to hear the blast of war, — she shrinketh from a 

foe I 
Come, in our turn, let us sojourn in her goodly haunts of 

j°y> — 

In the pillared porch to wave the torch, and her palaces 

destroy I 
Proud as when first thou slakedst thy thirst in the flow of 

conquered Seine, 
Aye, shalt thou lave, within that wave, thy blood-red flanks 

again. 
Then fiercely neigh, my gallant gray ! — thy chest is strong 

and ample ! 
Thy hoofs shall prance o'er the fields of France, and the pride 

of her heroes trample ! 



THE SONG OF THE COSSACK TO HIS HORSE. 275 

Kings are beleaguered on their thrones by their own vassal 

crew ; 
And in their den quake noblemen, and priests are bearded too ; 
And loud they yelp for the Cossacks' help to keep their bonds- 
men down, 
And they think it meet, while they kiss our feet, to wear a 

tyrant's crown ! 
The sceptre now to my lance shall bow, and the crosier and 

the cross 
Shall bend alike, when I lift my pike, and aloft that sceptre 

toss ! 
Then proudly neigh, my gallant gray ! — thy chest is broad 

and ample ! 
Thy hoofs shall prance o'er the fields of France, and the pride 

of her heroes trample ! 

In a night of storm I have seen a form ! — and the figure was 

a GIANT, 

And his eye was bent on the Cossack's tent, and his look was 

all defiant ; 
Kingly his crest, — and towards the West with his battle-axe 

he pointed ; 
And the " form " I saw was Attila ! of this earth the scourge 

anointed. 
From the Cossacks' camp let the horseman's tramp the coming 

crash announce; 
Let the vulture whet his beak sharp set, on the carrion field 

to pounce ; 
And proudly neigh, my charger gray ! — 0, thy chest is 

broad and ample ! 
Thy hoofs shall prance o'er the fields of France, and the pride 

of her heroes trample ! 

What boots old Europe's boasted fame, on which she builds 

reliance, 
When the North shall launch its avalanche on her works of 

art and science % 



276 PUBLIC AND PAKLOR READINGS. 

Hath she not wept her cities swept by our hordes of tramp- 
ling stallions, 

And tower and arch crushed in the march of our barbarous 
battalions % 

Can we not wield our fathers' shield 1 the same war-hatchet 
handle 1 

Do our blades want length, or the reapers strength, for the 
harvest of the Vandal 1 

Then proudly neigh, my gallant gray, for thy chest is strong 
and ample ; 

And thy hoofs shall prance o'er the fields of France, and the 
pride of her heroes trample ! 



DOROTHY IN THE GARRET.— J. T. Teowbridgb. 

IN the low-raftered garret, stooping 
Carefully over the creaking boards, 
Old Maid Dorothy goes a-groping 

Among its dusty and cobwebbed hoards ; 
Seeking some bundle of patches, hid 

Far under the eaves, or bunch of sage, 
Or satchel hung on its nail, amid 
The heirlooms of a bygone age. 

There is the ancient family chest, 

There the ancestral cards and hatchel ; 
Dorothy, sighing, sinks down to rest, 

Forgetful of patches, sage, and satchel 
Ghosts of faces peer from the gloom 

Of the chimney, where, with swifts and reel, 
And the long-disused, dismantled loom, 

Stands the old-fashioned spinning-wheel. 

She sees it back in the clean-swept kitchen, 
A part of her girlhood's little world ; 



DOROTHY IN THE GARRET. 277 

Her mother is there by the window, stitching ; 

Spindle buzzes, and reel is whirled 
With many a click : on her little stool 

She sits, a child, by the open door, 
Watching, and dabbling her feet in the pool 

Of sunshine spilled on the gilded floor. 

Her sisters are spinning all day long ; 

To her wakening sense the first sweet warning 
Of daylight come is the cheerful song 

To the hum of the wheel in the early morning. 
Benjie, the gentle, red-cheeked boy, 

On his way to school, peeps in at the gate ; 
In neat white pinafore, pleased and coy, 

She reaches a hand to her bashful mate ; 

And under the elms, a prattling pair, 

Together they go, through glimmer and gloom : — 
It all comes back to her, dreaming there 

In the low-raftered garret-room ; 
The hum of the wheel, and the summer weather, 

The heart's first trouble, and love's beginning, 
Are all in her memory linked together • 

And now it is she herself that is spinning. 

With the bloom of youth on cheek and lip, 

Turning the spokes with the flashing pin, 
Twisting the thread from the spindle-tip, 

Stretching it out and winding it in, 
To and fro, with a blithesome tread, 

Singing she goes, and her heart is full, 
And many a long-drawn golden thread 

Of fancy is spun with the shining wool. 

Her father sits in his favorite place, 

Puffing his pipe by the chimney-side ; 
Through curling clouds his kindly face 

Glows upon her with love and pride. 



278 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Lulled by the wheel, in the old arm-chair 

Her mother is musing, cat in lap, 
With beautiful drooping head, and hair 

Whitening under her snow-white cap. 

One by one, to the grave, to the bridal, 

They have followed her sisters from the door ; 
Now they are old, and she is their idol : — 

It all comes back on her heart once more. 
In the autumn dusk the hearth gleams brightly, 

The wheel is set by the shadowy wall, — 
A hand at the latch, — 't is lifted lightly, 

And in walks Benjie, manly and tall. 

His chair is placed ; the old man tips 

The pitcher, and brings his choicest fruit ; 
Benjie basks in the blaze, and sips, 

And tells his story, and joints his flute : 
0, sweet the tunes, the talk, the laughter ! 

They fill the hour with a glowing tide ; 
But sweeter the still, deep moments after, 

When she is alone by Benjie's side. 

But once with angry words they part : 

0, then the weary, weary days ! 
Ever with restless, wretched heart, 

Plying her task, she turns to gaze 
Far up the road ; and early and late 

She harks for a footstep at the door, 
And starts at the gust that swings the gate, 

And prays for Benjie, who comes no more. 

Her fault 1 Benjie, and could you steel 

Your thoughts toward one who loved you so 1 - 

Solace she seeks in the whirling wheel, 
In duty and love that lighten woe ; 

Striving with labor, not in vain, 

To drive away the dull day's dreariness, — 



DOROTHY IN THE GARRET. 279 

Blessing the toil that blunts the pain 

Of a deeper grief in the body's weariness. 

Proud and petted and spoiled was she : 

A word, and all her life is changed ! 
His wavering love too easily 

In the great, gay city grows estranged : 
One year : she sits in the old church pew ; 

A rustle, a murmur, — Dorothy ! hide 
Your face and shut from your soul the view ! 

'T is Benjie leading a white-veiled bride ! 

Now father and mother have long been dead, 

And the bride sleeps under a churchyard stone, 
And a bent old man with grizzled head 

Walks up the long dim aisle alone. 
Years blur to a mist ; and Dorothy 

Sits doubting betwixt the ghost she seems 
And the phantom of youth, more real than she, 

That meets her there in that haunt of dreams. 

Bright young Dorothy, idolized daughter, 

Sought by many a youthful adorer, 
Life, like a new risen-dawn on the water, 

Shining an endless vista before her ! 
Old Maid Dorothy, wrinkled and gray, 

Groping under the farm-house eaves, — 
And life is a brief November day 

That sets on a world of withered leaves ! 

Yet faithfulness in the humblest part 
Is better at last than proud success, 

And patience and love in a chastened heart- 
Are pearls more precious than happiness ; 

And in that morning when she shall wake 
To the spring-time freshness of youth again, 

All trouble will seem but a flying flake, 
And life-long sorrow a breath on the pane. 



280 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 



RAVENSWOOD AND LUCY ASHTON. — Scott. 

Lucy Ashton has solemnly plighted her faith to Ravenswood, a poor 
but high-spirited nobleman ; and as a mutual pledge they have broken 
a piece of gold together. Lucy's mother, finding a rich suitor for her 
daughter, urges her to write a letter of dismissal to Ravenswood, and 
consent to a union with Bucklaw. Lucy, driven to despair, at length 
yields to the will of her imperious mother, after many threats and en- 
treaties. The marriage day has come. The marriage contract is to be 
signed. Bucklaw, the bridegroom, Craigengelt, his parasite, Bide-the- 
bent, the clergyman, Lucy's parents and brother are present. 

THE business of the day now went forward ; Sir William 
Ashton signed the contract with legal solemnity and 
precision ; his son, with military nonchalance ; and Bucklaw, 
having subscribed as rapidly as Craigengelt could manage to 
turn the leaves, concluded by wiping his pen on that worthy's 
new laced cravat. 

It was now Miss Ashton's turn to sign the writings, and she 
was guided by her watchful mother to the table for that pur- 
pose. At her first attempt, she began to write with a dry 
pen, and when the circumstance was pointed out, seemed 
unable, after several attempts, to dip it in the massive silver 
ink-standish, which stood full before her. Lady Ashton's 
vigilance hastened to supply the deficiency. I have myself 
seen the fatal deed, and in the distinct characters in wliich 
the name of Lucy Ashton is traced on each page, there is 
only a very slight tremulous irregularity, indicative of her 
state of mind at the time of the subscription. But the last 
signature is incomplete, defaced, and blotted ; for, while her 
hand was employed in tracing it, a hasty tramp of a horse 
was heard at the gate, succeeded by a step in the outer gal- 
lery, and a voice, which, in a commanding tone, bore down 
the opposition of the menials. The pen dropped from Lucy's 
fingers, as she exclaimed with a faint shriek, " He is come, — 
he is come ! " 

Hardly had Miss Ashton dropped the pen, when the door 
of the apartment flew open, and the Master of Ravenswood 
entered the apartment. 



RAVENSWOOD AND LUCY ASHTON. 281 

Lockhard and another domestic, who had in vain attempted 
to oppose his passage through the gallery, or antechamber, 
were seen standing on the threshold transfixed with surprise, 
which was instantly communicated to the whole party in the 
state-room. That of Colonel Douglas Ashton was mingled 
with resentment ; that of Bucklaw, with haughty and affected 
indifference ; the rest, even Lady Ashton herself, showed 
signs of fear, and Lucy seemed stiffened to stone by this 
unexpected apparition. Apparition it might well be termed, 
for Ravenswood had more the appearance of one returned 
from the dead than of a living visitor. 

He planted himself full in the middle of the apartment, 
opposite to the table at which Lucy was seated, on whom, as 
if she had been alone in the chamber, he bent his eyes with 
a mingled expression of deep grief and deliberate indignation. 
His dark-colored riding-cloak, displaced from one shoulder, 
hung around one side of his person in the ample folds of the 
Spanish mantle. The rest of his rich dress was travel-soiled, 
and deranged by hard riding. He had a sword by his side, 
and pistols in his belt. His slouched hat, which he had not 
removed at entrance, gave an additional gloom to his dark 
features, which, wasted by sorrow, and marked by the ghastly 
look communicated by long illness, added to a countenance 
naturally somewhat stern and wild a fierce and even savage 
expression. The matted and dishevelled locks of hair which 
escaped from under his hat, together with his fixed and 
unmoved posture, made his head more resemble that of a 
marble bust than that of a living man. He said not a single 
word, and there was a deep silence in the company for more 
than two minutes. 

It was broken by Lady Ashton, who in that space partly 
recovered her natural audacity. She demanded to know the 
cause of this unauthorized intrusion. 

u That is a question, madam," said her son, " which I have 
the best right to ask, and I must request of the Master 
of Ravenswood to follow me, where he can answer it at leir 



282 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

* Bucklaw interposed, saying, "No man on earth should 
usurp his previous right in demanding an explanation from 
the Master. — Craigengelt," he added, in an undertone, " why- 
do you stand staring as if you saw a ghost 1 fetch me my 
sword from the gallery." 

" I will relinquish to none," said Colonel Ashton, " my right 
of calling to account the man who has offered this unpar- 
alleled affront to my family." .... 

" Silence ! " exclaimed Ravens wood, " let him who really 
seeks danger take the fitting time when it is to be found ; 
my mission here will be shortly accomplished. Is that 
your handwriting, madam % " he added in a softer tone, 
extending towards Miss Ashton her last letter. 

A faltering " Yes," seemed rather to escape from her lips, 
than to be uttered as a voluntary answer. 

" And is this also your handwriting 1 " extending towards 
her the mutual engagement. 

Lucy remained silent. Terror, and a yet stronger and 
more confused feeling, so utterly disturbed her understanding, 
that she probably scarcely comprehended the question that 
was put to her. 

"If you design," said Sir William Ashton, "to found any 
legal claim on that paper, sir, do not expect to receive any 
answer to an extrajudicial question." 

" Sir William Ashton, " said Ravenswood, " I pray you, and 
all who hear me, that you will not mistake my purpose. If 
this young lady, of her own free will, desires the restoration 
of this contract, as her letter would seem to imply, there 
is not a withered leaf which this autumn wind strews on the 
heath, that is more valueless in my eyes. But I must and 
will hear the truth from her own mouth, — without this satis- 
faction I will not leave this spot. Murder me by numbers 
you possibly may ; but I am an armed man, I am a desper- 
ate man, and I will not die without ample vengeance. 
This is my resolution, take it as you may. I will hear her 
determination from her own mouth ; from her own mouth, 
alone, and without witnesses, will I hear it. Now, choose," 



RAVENSWOOD AND LUCY ASHTON. 283 

he said, drawing his sword with the right hand, and with the 
left, by the same motion, taking a pistol from his belt and 
cocking it, but turning the point of one weapon and the 
muzzle of the other to the ground, — " choose if you will 
have this hall floated with blood, or if you will grant me the 
decisive interview with my affianced bride which the laws of 
God and the country alike entitle me to demand." 

All recoiled at the sound of his voice, and the determined 
action by which it was accompanied ; for the ecstasy of real 
desperation seldom fails to overpower the less energetic pas- 
sions by which it may be opposed. The clergyman was the 
first to speak. " In the name of God," he said, " receive an 
overture of peace from the meanest of his servants. What 
this honorable person demands, albeit it is urged with over- 
violence, hath yet in it something of reason. Let him hear 
from Miss Lucy's own lips that she hath dutifully acceded to 
the will of her parents, and repenteth her of her covenant 
with him ; and when he is assured of this, he will depart in 
peace unto his own dwelling, and cumber us no more. Alas ! 
the workings of the ancient Adam are strong even in the 
regenerate, — surely we should have long-suffering with 
those who, being yet in the gall of bitterness and bond of 
iniquity, are swept forward by the uncontrollable current of 
worldly passion. Let, then, the Master of Ravenswood have 
the interview on which he insisteth ; it can but be as a pass- 
ing pang to this honorable maiden, since her faith is now irrev- 
ocably pledged to the choice of her parents. Let it, I say, 
be thus ; it belongeth to my functions to entreat your honor's 
compliance with this healing overture." 

" Never," answered Lady Ashton, whose rage had now over- 
come her first surprise and terror, — " never shall this man 
speak in private with my daughter, the affianced bride of 
another ! Pass from this room who will, I remain here. I 
fear neither his violence nor his weapons, though some," she 
said, glancing a look towards Colonel Ashton, " who bear my 
name, appear more moved by them." 

"For God's sake, madam," answered the worthy divine, 



284 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

"add not fuel to firebrands. The Master of Ravenswood 
cannot, I am sure, object to your presence, the young lady's 
state of health being considered, and your maternal duty. I 
myself will also tarry ; perad venture my gray hairs may turn 
away wrath." 

" You are welcome to do so, sir/' said Ravenswood, " and 
Lady Ashton is also welcome to remain, if she shall think 
proper ; but let all others depart." .... 

Ravenswood sheathed his sword, uncocked and returned 
his pistol to his belt, walked deliberately to the door of 
the apartment, which he bolted, returned, raised his hat from 
his forehead, and, gazing upon Lucy with eyes in which an 
expression of sorrow overcame their late fierceness, spread his 
dishevelled locks back from his face, and said, " Do you know 
me, Miss Ashton 1 I am still Edgar Ravenswood." She 
was silent, and he went on with increasing vehemence, " I 
am still that Edgar Ravenswood, who, for your affection, 
renounced the dear ties by which injured honor bound him to 
seek vengeance. I am that Ravenswood, who, for your sake, 
forgave, nay, clasped hands in friendship with the oppressor 
and pillager of his house, — the traducer and murderer of his 
father." 

" My daughter," answered Lady Ashton, interrupting him, 
" has no occasion to dispute the identity of your person ; the 
venom of your present language is sufficient to remind her 
that she speaks with the mortal enemy of her father." 

" I pray you to be patient, madam," answered Ravenswood ; 
"my answer must come from her own lips. Once more, 
Miss Lucy Ashton, I am that Ravenswood to whom you 
granted the solemn engagement, which you now desire to 
retract and cancel." 

Lucy's bloodless lips could only falter out the words, " It 
was my mother." 

" She speaks truly," said Lady Ashton ; "it was I, who, 
authorized alike by the laws of God and man, advised her, 
and concurred with her, to set aside an unhappy and precipi- 
tate engagement, and to annul it by the authority of Scripture 
itself." .... 



RAVENSWOOD AND LUCY ASHTON. 285 

"And is this alH" said Ravenswood, looking at Lucy; 
u are you willing to barter sworn faith, the exercise of free- 
will, and the feelings of mutual affection, to this wretched 
hypocritical sophistry 1 " 

" Hear him ! " said Lady Ashton, looking at the clergy- 
man, — " hear the blasphemer ! " 

" May God forgive him," said Bide-the-bent, "and enlighten 
his ignorance ! " 

" Hear what I have sacrificed for you," said Ravenswood, 
still addressing Lucy, " ere you sanction what has been done 
in your name. The honor of an ancient family, the urgent 
advice of my best friends, have been in vain used to sway my 
resolution ; neither the arguments of reason nor the portents 
of superstition have shaken my fidelity. The very dead 
have arisen to warn me, and their warning has been despised. 
Are you prepared to pierce my heart for its fidelity with the 
very weapon which my rash confidence intrusted to your 
grasp 1 " 

"Master of Ravenswood," said Lady Ashton, "you have 
asked what questions you thought fit. You see the total 
incapacity of my daughter to answer you. But I will reply 
for her, and in a manner which you cannot dispute. You 
desire to know whether Lucy Ashton, of her own free will, 
desires to annul the engagement into which she has been 
trepanned. You have her letter under her own hand, de- 
manding the surrender of it ; and, in yet more full evidence 
of her purpose, here is the contract which she has this 
morning subscribed, in presence of this reverend gentleman, 
with Mr. Hayston of Bucklaw." 

Ravenswood gazed upon the deed, as if petrified. " And it 
was without fraud or compulsion," said he, looking towards 
the clergyman, "that Miss Ashton subscribed this parch- 
ment 1 " 

" I vouch it upon my sacred character." 

" This is indeed, madam, an undeniable piece of evidence," 
said Ravenswood, sternly ; " and it will be equally unneces- 
sary and dishonorable to waste another word in useless 



286 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

remonstrance or reproach. There, madam," he said, laying 
down before Lucy the signed paper and the broken piece of 
gold, — ''there are the evidences of your first engagement; 
may you be more faithful to that which you have just 
formed ! I will trouble you to return the corresponding 
tokens of my ill-placed confidence, — I ought rather to say, 
of my egregious folly." 

Lucy returned the scornful glance of her lover with a gaze 
from which perception seemed to have been banished; yet 
she seemed partly to have understood his meaning, for she 
raised her hands as if to undo a blue ribbon which she wore 
around her neck. She was unable to accomplish her purpose, 
but Lady Ashton cut the ribbon asunder, and detached the 
broken piece of gold which Miss Ashton had till then worn 
concealed in her bosom; the written counterpart of the 
lovers' engagement she for some time had had in her own 
possession. With a haughty courtesy, she delivered both to 
Ravenswood, who was much softened when he took the piece 
of gold. 

" And she could wear it thus," he said, speaking to him- 
self, — " could wear it in her very bosom, — could wear it 
next to her heart — even when — But complaint avails not," 
he said, dashing from his eye the tear which had gathered in 
it, and resuming the stern composure of his manner. He 
strode to the chimney, and threw into the fire the paper and 
piece of gold, stamping upon the coals with the heel of his 
boot, as if to insure their destruction. " I will be no longer," 
he then said, "an intruder here. Your evil wishes, and 
your worse offices, Lady Ashton, I will only return, by hoping 
these will be your last machinations against your daughter's 
honor and happiness. And to you, madam," be said, address- 
ing Lucy, " I have nothing further to say, except to pray to 
God that you may not become a world's wonder for this act 
of wilful and deliberate perjury." Having uttered these 
words, he turned on his heel, and left the apartment. 



THE SILENT TOWER OF BOTTREAUX. 287 



THE SILENT TOWER OF BOTTREAUX. 

Bottreaux is the old name for Boscastle. The church at Bottreaux, 
in Cornwall, has no bells, while the neighboring tower of Tintagel con- 
tains a fine peal of six. It is said that a peal of bells for Bottreaux was 
once cast at a foundry on the Continent, and that the vessel which was 
bringing them went down within sight of the church-tower. 

TINTAGEL bells ring o'er the tide, 
The boy leans on his vessel's side, 
He hears that sound, while dreams of home 
Soothe the wild orphan of the foam. 
" Come to thy God in time," 
Thus said their pealing chime ; 
" Youth, manhood, old age past, 
Come to thy God at last." 

But why are Bottreaux's echoes still ? 

Her tower stands proudly on the hill, 

Yet the strange chough that home hath found, 

The lamb lies sleeping on the ground. 

"Come to thy God in time," 

Should be her answering chime ; 

" Come to thy God at last," 

Should echo on the blast. 

The ship rode down with courses free, 
The daughter of a distant sea, 
Her sheet was loose, her anchor stored, 
The merry Bottreaux bells on board. 

" Come to thy God in time," 

Rung out Tintagel chime j 

"Youth, manhood, old age past, 

Come to thy God at last." 

The pilot heard his native bells 
Hang on the breeze in fitful spells. 



288 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

" Thank God," with reverent brow, he cried, 
" We make the shore with evening's tide." 
" Come to thy God in time," 
It was his marriage chime ; 
" Youth, manhood, old age past, 
Come to thy God at last." 

M Thank God, thou whining knave, on land, 
But thank at sea the steersman's hand " ; 
The captain's voice rose o'er the gale, 
" Thank the good ship and ready sail." 
" Come to thy God in time," 
Sad grew the boding chime ; 
" Come to thy God at last," 
Boomed heavy on the blast. 

Uprose that sea as if it heard 
The mighty Master's signal word. 
What thrills the captain's whitening lip 1 
The death groans of his sinking ship. 
" Come to thy God in time," 
Swung deep the funeral chime ; 
" Grace, mercy, kindness past, 
Come to thy God at last." 

Long did the rescued pilot tell, 
When gray hairs o'er his forehead fell, 
While those around would hear and weep, 
That fearful judgment of the deep. 
" Come to thy God in time," 
He read his native chime ; 
" Youth, manhood, old age past, 
Come to thy God at last." 

Still, when the storm of Bottreaux's waves 
Is waking in his weedy caves, 



THE HIRELING SWISS REGIMENT. 289 

Those bells, that sullen surges hide, 
Peal their deep tones beneath the tide. 

" Come to thy God in time," 

Thus saith the ocean chime ; 
" Storm, whirlwind, billows past, 

Come to thy God at last." 



THE HIRELING SWISS REGIMENT. — Victor Hugo. 

WHEN the regiment of the Halberdiers is proudly march- 
ing by, 
The eagle of the mountains screams from out his stormy sky ; 
Who speaketh to the precipice, and to the chasm sheer ; 
Who hovers o'er the throne of kings, and bids the caitiffs 

fear. 
King of the peak and glacier ; king of the cold, white scalps, — 
He lifts his head, at that close tread, the eagle of the Alps. 

shame, those men that march below ! ignominy dire ! 
Are the sons of my free mountains sold for imperial hire 1 
Ah, the vilest in the dungeon ! — Ah, the slave upon the 



Is great, is pure, is glorious, is grand compared with these, 
Who, born amid my holy rocks, in solemn places high, 
Where the tall pines bend like rushes when the storm goes 

sweeping by, 
Yet give the strength of foot they learned by perilous path 

and flood, 
And from their blue-eyed mothers won, the old, mysterious 

blood ; 
The dariug that the good south-wind into their nostrils 

blew, 
And the proud swelling of the heart with each pure breath 

they drew ; 



290 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

The graces of the mountain glens, with flowers in summer 

gay; 

And all the glory of the hills, to earn a lackey's pay. 

Their country free and joyous, — she of the rugged sides, — 
She of the rough peaks arrogant, whereon the tempest rides ; 
Mother of the unconquered thought and of the savage form, 
Who brings out of her sturdy heart the hero and the storm ; 
Who giveth freedom unto man, and life unto the beast ; 
Who hears her silver torrents ring like joy-bells at a feast ; 
Who hath her caves for palaces, and where her chalets 

stand, — 
The proud old archer of Altorf, with his good bow in his 

band; — 
Is she to suckle jailers % shall shame and glory rest, 
Amid her lakes and mountains, like twins upon her breast ] 
Shall the two-headed eagle, marked with her double blow, 
Drink of her milk through all those hearts whose blood he 

bids to flow 1 

Say was it pomp ye needed, and all the proud array 

Of courtliness and high parade upon a gala day 1 

Look up ; have not my valleys, their torrents white with 

foam, 
Their lines of silver bullion on the blue hills of home 1 
Doth not sweet May embroider my rocks with pearls and 

flowers % 
Her fingers trace a richer lace than yours in all my bowers, 
Are not my old peaks gilded when the sun rises proud, 
And each one shakes a white mist plume out of the thunder- 
cloud 1 
neighbors of the golden sky, — sons of the mountain 

sod, — 
Why wear a base king's colors for the livery of God ] 

shame ! despair ! to see my Alps their giant shadows fling 
Into the very waiting-room of tyrant and of king ! 



THE AVENGING CHILDE. 291 

thou deep heaven, unsullied yet, into thy, gulfs sublime, 
Up azure tracts of flaming light, let my free pinion climb ; 
Till from my sight, in that clear light, earth and her crimes 

be gone, — 
The men who act the evil deeds, the caitiffs who look on ; 
Far, far into that space immense, beyond the vast white veil, 
Where distant stars come out and shine, and the great sun 

grows pale. 



THE AVENGING CHILDE. — Lockhart. 

HURRAH ! hurrah! avoid the way of the Avenging 
Childe ; 
His horse is swift as sands that drift, — an Arab of the wild ; 
His gown is twisted round his arm, — a ghastly cheek he 

wears ; 
And in his hand, for deadly harm, a hunting-knife he bears. 

Avoid that knife in battle strife, that weapon short and thin ; 
The dragon's gore hath bathed it o'er, seven times 't was 

steeped therein ; 
Seven times the smith hath proved its pith, — it cuts a 

coulter through ; 
In France the blade was fashioned, from Spain the shaft it 

drew. 

He sharpens it, as he doth ride, upon his saddle-bow ; 
He sharpens it on either side, he makes the steel to glow. 
He rides to find Don Quadros, that false and faitour * knight ; 
His glance of ire is hot as fire, although his cheek be white. 

He found hire standing by the king, within the judgment- 
hall; 
He rushed within the barons' ring, — he stood before them all 

* Vagabond. 



292 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Seven times he gazed and pondered if he the deed should do ; 
Eight times distraught he looked and thought, then out his 
dagger flew. 

He stabbed therewith at Quadros, — the king did step be- 
tween ; 

It pierced his royal garment of purple wove with green. 

He fell beneath the canopy, upon the tiles he lay. 

" Thou traitor keen, what dost thou mean, — thy king why 
wouldst thou slay?" 

" Now, pardon, pardon," cried the Childe ; " I stabbed not, 

king, at thee, 
But him, that caitiff, blood-defiled, who stood beside thy 

knee : 
Eight brothers were we, — in the land might none more 

loving be, — 
They all are slain by Quadros' hand, — they all are dead but 

me. 

" Good king, I fain would wash the stain, — for vengeance is 

my cry ; 
This murderer with sword and spear to battle I defy." 
But all took part with Quadros, except one lovely May, — 
Except the king's fair daughter, none word for him would 

say. 

She took their hands, she led them forth into the court 

below ; 
She bade the ring be guarded, she bade the trumpet blow ; 
From lofty place, for that stem race, the signal she did 

throw, — 
"With truth and right the Lord will fight; together let 

them go." 

The one is up, the other down, the hunter's knife is bare ; 
It cuts the lace beneath the face, it cuts through beard and 
hair; 



FAIR SUFFERERS. 293 

Right soon that knife hath quenched his life, — the head is 

sundered sheer; 
Then gladsome smiled the Avenging Childe, and fixed it on 

his spear. 

But when the king beholds him bring that token of his 

truth, 
Nor scorn nor wrath his bosom hath, — " Kneel down, thou 

noble youth ; 
Kneel down, kneel down, and kiss my crown, I am no more 

thy foe ; 
My daughter now may pay the vow she plighted long ago." 



FAIR SUFFERERS. 

BY fair sufferers we mean about ninety-nine out of every 
hundred of those poor dear young ladies, condemned, 
through the accident of their birth, to languish in silk and 
satin, beneath the load of a fashionable existence. 

Ah ! little think the gay licentious paupers, who have no 
plays, operas, and evening parties to be forced to go to, and 
no carriages to be obliged to ride about in, of the miseries 
which are endured by the daughters of affluence ! 

It is a well-known fact, that scarcely one of those tender 
creatures can be in a theatre or a concert-room ten minutes 
without being seized with a violent headache, which, more 
frequently than not, obliges her to leave before the perform- 
ance is over, and drag a brother, husband, lover, or attentive 
young man away with her. If spared the headache, how 
often is she threatened with a fainting fit, — nay, now and 
then seized with it, — to the alarm and disturbance of her 
company ! Not happening to feel faint exactly, still there is 
a sensation, " a something," as she describes it, " she does n't 
know what," which she is almost sure to be troubled with. 
Unvisited by these afflictions, nevertheless, either the cold, or 



294 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

the heat, or the glare of the gas, or some other source of 
pain, oppresses or excruciates her susceptible nerves. And 
when we take one such young lady, and put together all the 
public amusements which she must either go to — or die — 
in the course of a season ; and when we add up all the head- 
aches and swoons and the " somethings-she-does-n't-know- 
what," the shiverings, burnings, and other agonizing sensa- 
tions which she has undergone by the end of it, the result is 
an aggregate of torture truly frightful to contemplate. 

Suppose she is obliged to walk, — this is sometimes actually 
the case ; — happy is she if she can go twenty yards without 
some pain or other, in the side, the back, the shoulder, the 
great toe. Thus the pleasure of shopping, promenading, or a 
picnic is imbittered. 

If she reads a chapter in a novel, the chances are that her 
temples throb for it. She tries to embroider a corsair ; 
doing more than an arm of him at a time strains her eyes. 
Employ herself in what way she will, she feels fatigued 
afterwards, and may think herself well off if she is not 
worse. 

Without a care to vex her, save, perhaps, some slight mis- 
givings respecting "the captain," she is unable to rest, though 
on a couch of down. Exercise would procure her slumber ; 
but 0, she cannot take it ! 

Whether a little less confinement of the waist, earlier 
hours, plainer luncheons, more frequent airings in the green 
fields, and mental and bodily exertion, generally, than what, 
in these respects, is the fashionable usage, would in any way 
alleviate the miseries of our "fair sufferers," may be ques- 
tioned. It may also be inquired how far such miseries are 
imaginary, and to what extent a trifling exercise of resolution 
would tend to mitigate them. Otherwise supposing them to 
be ills that woman is necessarily heiress to, — unavoidable, 
irremediable, — what torments, what anguish, must fish wo- 
men, washerwomen, charwomen, and haymakers, — to say 
nothing of servants of all work, — and even ladies' maids, en- 
dure every day of their lives ! 



APPLEDORE IN A STORM. 295 



APPLEDORE IN A STORM. — J. R. Lowell. 

HOW looks Appledore in a storm 1 
I have seen it when its crags seemed frantic, 

Butting against the mad Atlantic, 
When surge on surge would heap enorme, 

Cliffs of emerald topped with snow, 

That lifted and lifted, and then let go 
A great white avalanche of thunder, 

A grinding, blinding, deafening ire 
Monadnock might have trembled under ; 

And the island, whose rock-roots pierce below 

To where they are warmed with the central fire, 
Ycu could feel its granite fibres racked, 

As it seemed to plunge with a shudder and thrill 

Right at the breast of the swooping hill, 
And to rise again snorting a cataract 
Of rage-froth from every cranny and ledge, 

While the sea drew its breath in hoarse and deep, 
And the next vast breaker curled its edge, 

Gathering itself for a mightier leap. 

North, east, and south there are reefs and breakers 
You would never dream of in smooth weather, 

That toss and gore the sea for acres, 

Bellowing and gnashing and snarling together ; 

Look northward, where Duck Island lies, 

And over its crown you will see arise, 

Against a background of slaty skies, 
A row of pillars still and white, 
That glimmer, and then are out of sight, 

As if the moon should suddenly kiss, 

While you crossed the gusty desert by night, 

The long colonnades of Persepolis ; 

Look southward for White Island light, 

The lantern stands ninety feet o'er the tide ; 



296 



PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 



There is first a half-mile of tumult and fight, 
Of dash and roar and tumble and fright, 

And surging bewilderment wild and wide, 
Where the breakers struggle left and right, 

Then a mile or more of rushing sea, 
And then the lighthouse slim and lone ; 
And wherever the weight of the ocean is thrown 
Full and fair on White Island head, 

A great mist-jotun you will see 

Lifting himself up silently 
High and huge o'er the lighthouse top, 
With hands of wavering spray outspread, 

Groping after the little tower, 

That seems to shrink and shorten and cower, 
Till the monster's arms of a sudden drop, 

And silently and fruitlessly 

He sinks again into the sea. 



You, meanwhile, where drenched you stand, 

Awaken once more to the rush and roar, 
And on the rock-point tighten your hand, 
As you turn and see a valley deep, 

That was not there a moment before, 
Suck rattling down between you and a heap 
Of toppling billow, whose instant fall 

Must sink the whole island once for all ; 
Or watch the silenter, stealthier seas 

Feeling their way to you more and more ; 
If they once should clutch you high as the knees, 
They would whirl you down like a sprig of kelp, 
Beyond all reach of hope or help ; — 

And such in a storm is Appledore. 



1 HOLD STILL. 29? 



I HOLD STILL. — Julius Sturm. 

PAIN'S furnace-heat within me quivers, 
God's breath upon the flame doth blow, 
And all my heart in anguish shivbrs, 

And trembles at the fiery glow ; 
And yet I whisper, As God will ! 
And in his hottest fire hold still. 

He comes and lays my heart, all heated, 

On the hard anvil, minded so 
Into his own fair shape to beat it 

With his great hammer, blow on blow ; 
And yet I whisper, As God will ! 
And at his heaviest blows hold still. 

He takes my softened heart and beats it, 
The sparks fly off at every blow ; 

He turns it o'er and o'er and heats it, 
And lets it cool and makes it glow ; 

And yet I whisper, As God will ! 

And in his mighty hand hold stilL 

Why should I murmur 1 for the sorrow 
Thus only longer lived would be ; 

Its end may come, and will, to-morrow, 
When God has done his work in me; 

So I say, trusting, As God will ! 

And, trusting to the end, hold stilL 

He kindles for my profit purely 

Affliction's glowing fiery brand, 
And all his heaviest blows are surely 

Inflicted by a master hand ; 
So I say, praying, As God will ! 
And hope in him, and suffer still. 
13* 



298 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 



A THANKSGIVING DINNER.— Mes. Ann S. Stephens. 

0, I love an old-fashioned thanksgiving, 
When the crops are all safe in the barn ; 

When the chickens are plump with good living, 
And the wool is all spun into yarn. 

It is pleasant to draw round the table, 

When uncles and cousins are there, 
And grandpa, who scarcely is able, 

Sits down in his old oaken chair. 

It is pleasant to wait for the blessing, 
With a heart free from malice and strife, 

While a turkey that 's portly with dressing 
Lies meekly awaiting the knife. 

CHRISTMAS, New Year, the Fourth of July, in short, all 
the holidays of the year, were crowded into one by Mrs. 
Gray. During the whole twelve months she commemorated 
Thanksgiving only. You should have seen the old lady as 
Thanksgiving week drew near. 

You should have seen her surrounded by raisins, black 
currants, pumpkin sauce, peeled apples, sugar-boxes, and 
plates of golden butter, her plump hand pearly with flour- 
dust, the whole kitchen redolent with ginger, allspice, and 
cloves ! You should have seen her grating orange-peel and 
nutmegs, the border of her snow-white cap rising and falling 
to the motion of her hands, and the soft gray hair under- 
neath tucked hurriedly back of the ear on one side, where it 
had threatened to be in the way. 

You should have seen her in that large, splint-bottomed 
rocking-chair, with a wooden bowl in her capacious lap, and a 
sharp chopping-knife in her right hand ; with what a soft, easy 
motion the chopping-knife fell ! with what a quiet and smiling 
air the dear old lady would take up a quantity of the pow- 
dered beef on the flat of her knife, and observe, as it show- 
ered softly down to the tray again, that " meat chopped too 
fine for mince-pies was sure poison." 



A THANKSGIVING DINNER. 299 

Yes, you should have seen Mrs. Gray at this very time, in 
order to appreciate fully the perfections of an old-fashioned 
New England housewife. They are departing from the land. 
Railroads and steamboats are sweeping them away. In a 
little time this very description will have the dignity of an 
antique subject. Women who cook their own dinners and 
take care of the work-hands are getting to be legendary even 
now. 

The day came at last, bland as the smile of a warm heart ; 
a breath of summer seemed whispering with the over-ripe 
leaves. The sunshine was of that warm, golden yellow which 
belongs to the autumn. A few hardy flowers glowed in the 
front yard, richly tinted dahlias, marigolds, chrysanthemums, 
and China-asters, with the most velvety amaranths, still kept 
their bloom, for those huge old maples sheltered them like 
a tent, and flowers always blossomed later in that house than 
elsewhere. No wonder ! Inside and out, all was pleasant and 
genial. The fall flowers seemed to thrive upon Mrs. Gray's 
smiles. Her rosy countenance, as she overlooked them, seemed 
to warm up their leaves like a sunbeam. Everything grew 
and brightened about her. Everything combined to make 
this particular Thanksgiving one to be remembered. 

Mrs. Gray had done wonders that morning. The dinner 
was in a most hopeful state of preparation. The great red- 
crested, imperious-looking turkey, that had strutted away his 
brief life in the barn-yard, was now snugly bestowed in the 
oven, — Mrs. Gray had not yet degenerated down to a cook- 
ing-stove, — his heavy coat of feathers was scattered to the 
wind. His head — that arrogant crimson head, that had so 
often awed the whole poultry-yard — lay all unheeded in the 
dust, close by the horse-block. There he sat, the poor de- 
nuded monarch, turned up in a dripping-pan, simmering 
himself down in the kitchen oven. Never, in all his pomp, 
had that bosom been so warm and distended, — yet the huge 
turkey had been a sad gourmand in his time. A rich thymy 
odor broke through every pore of his body ; drops of luscious 
gravy dripped down his sides, filling the oven with an unctuous 



300 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

steam that penetrated a crevice in the door, and made the 
poor Irish girl cross herself devoutly. She felt her spirit so 
yearning after the good things of earth, and, never having seen 
Thanksgiving set down in the calendar, was shy of surrender- 
ing her heart to a holiday that had uo saint to patronize it. 

No wonder the odor that stole so insidiously to her nos- 
trils was appetizing, for the turkey had plenty of companion- 
ship in the oven. A noble chicken-pie flanked his dripping- 
pan on the right ; a delicate sucking-pig was drawn up to the 
left wing ; in the rear towered a mountain of roast beef, while 
the mouth of the oven was choked up with a generous In- 
dian pudding. It was an ovenful worthy of New England, 
worthy of the day. 

The hours came creeping on when guests might be expected. 

Mrs. Gray was ready for company, and tried her best to 
remain with proper dignity in the great rocking-chair that she 
had drawn to a window commanding a long stretch of the 
road ; but every few moments she would start up, bustle 
across the room, and charge Kitty, the Irish girl, to be care- 
ful and watch the oven, to keep a sharp eye on the sauce- 
pans in the fireplace, and, above all, to have the mince-pies 
within range of the fire, that they might receive a gradual 
and gentle warmth by the time they were wanted. Then she 
would return to the room, arrange the branches of asparagus 
that hung laden with red berries over the looking-glass, or 
dust the spotless table with her handkerchief, just to keep 
herself busy, as she said. 

At last she heard the distant sound of a wagon, turning 
down the cross-road toward the house. She knew the tramp 
of her own market horse even at that distance, and seated 
herself by the window, ready to receive her expected guests 
with becoming dignity. 

The little one-horse wagon came down the road with a sort 
of dash quite honorable to the occasion. Mrs. Gray's hired 
man was beginning to enter into the spirit of a holiday ; and 
the old horse himself made everything rattle again, he was so 
eager to reach home the moment it hove in sight. 



A THANKSGIVING DINNER. 301 

The wagon drew up to the door-yard gate with a nourish 
worthy of the Third Avenue. The hired man sprang out, and, 
with some show of awkward gallantry, lifted a young girl in 
a pretty pink calico dress and a cottage bonnet down from the 
front seat. Mrs. Gray could maintain her position no longer ; 
for the young girl glanced that way with a look so eloquent, a 
smile so bright, that it warmed the dear old lady's heart like 
a flash of fire in the winter time. She started up, hastily 
shook loose the folds of her dress, and went out, rustling all 
the way like a tree in autumn. 

" You are welcome, dear, — welcome as green peas in June, 
or radishes in March," she cried, seizing the little hand held 
toward her, and kissing the heavenly young face. 

The girl turned with a bright look, and, making a graceful 
little wave of the hand toward an aged man who was tenderly 
helping a female from the wagon, seemed about to speak. 

" I understand, dear, I know all about it ! the good old 
people, — grandpa and grandma, of course. How could I 
help knowing them 1 " Mrs. Gray went up to the old people 
as she spoke, with a bland welcome in every feature of her 
face. 

" Know them, of course I do ! " she said, enfolding the old 
gentleman's hand with her plump fingers. "I — I — gracious 
goodness, now, it really does seem as if I had seen that face 
somewhere ! " she added, hesitating, and with her eyes fixed 
doubtingly on the stranger, as if she were calling up some 
vague remembrance, — " strange, now is n't it ? but he looks 
natural as life." 

The old man turned a warming glance toward his wife, and 
then answered, with a grave smile, " that, at any rate, Mrs. 
Gray could never be a stranger to them, — she who had done 
so much — " 

She interrupted him with one of her mellow laughs. Thanks 
for a kind act always made the good woman feel awkward, and 
she blushed like a girl. 

All truly benevolent persons shrink from spoken thanks. 
The gratitude expressed by looks and actions may give pleas- 



302 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

ure, but there is something too material in words, — they de- 
stroy all the refinement of a generous action. Good Mrs. 
Gray felt this the more sensitively, because her own words 
had seemed to challenge the thanks of her guest. The color 
came into her smooth cheek, and she began to arrange the 
folds of her dress with both hands, exhibiting a degree of 
awkwardness quite unusual to her. When she lifted her eyes 
again, they fell upon a young man coming down the cross- 
road on foot, with an eager and buoyant step. 

" There he comes ; I thought he would not be long on the 
way," she cried, while a flash of gladness radiated her face. 
"It's my nephew; you see him there, Mrs. Warren, — no, 
the maple branch is in the way ! Here he is again, — now 
look ! a noble fellow, is n't he 1 " 

Mrs. Warren looked, and was indeed struck by the free air 
and superior appearance of the youth. He had evidently 
walked some distance, for a light over-sack hung across his 
arm, and his face was flushed with exercise. Seeing his aunt, 
the boy waved his hand ; his lips parted in a joyous smile, 
and he hastened his pace almost to a run. 

Mrs. Gray's little brown eyes glistened; she could not turn 
them from the youth even while addressing her guest. 

" Is n't he handsome ? and good, — you have no idea, 
ma'am, how good he is ! There, that is just like him, the 
wild creature ! " she continued, as the youth laid one hand 
upon the door-yard fence, and vaulted over, "right into 
my flower-beds, trampling over the grass there, — did you 
ever % " 

" Could n't help it, Aunt Sarah," shouted the youth, with a 
careless laugh, " I'm in a hurry to get home, and the gate is 
too far off. Three kisses for every flower I tramp down, — 
will that do ? Ha ! what little lady is this 1 " 

The last exclamation was drawn forth by Julia Warren, 
who had seated herself at the foot of the largest maple, and 
with her lap full of flowers, was arranging them into bouquets. 
On hearing Robert's voice she looked up with a glance of 
pleasant surprise, and a smile broke over her lips. There 



A THANKSGIVING DINNER. 303 

was something so rosy and joyous in his face, and in the 
tones of his voice, that it rippled through her heart as if a 
bird overhead had just broken into song. The youth looked 
upon her for a moment with his bright, gleeful eyes, then, 
throwing off his hat and sweeping back the damp chestnut 
curls from his forehead, he sat down by her side, and cast a 
glance of laughing defiance at his relative. 

" Come out here and get the kisses, Aunt Sarah. I have 
made up my mind to stay among the flowers ! " 

Mrs. Gray laughed at the young rogue's impudence, as she 
called it, and came out to meet him. 

At that moment the Irish girl came through the front door 
with an expression of solemn import in her face. She whis- 
pered in a flustered manner to her mistress, and the words 
" spoilt entirely " reached Robert's ear. 

Away went the aunt, all in a state of excitement, to the 
kitchen. 

Whatever mischief had happened in the kitchen, the dinner 
turned out magnificently. The turkey came upon the table 
a perfect miracle of cookery. The pig absolutely looked more 
beautiful than life, crouching in his bed of parsley, with his 
head up, and holding a lemon daintily between his jaws. The 
chicken-pie, pinched around the edge into a perfect embroidery 
by the two plump thumbs of Mrs. Gray, and then finished off 
by an elaborate border done in key work, would have charmed 
the most fastidious artist. 

You have no idea how beautiful colors may be blended on 
a dinner-table, unless you have seen just the kind of feast to 
which Mrs. Gray invited her guests. The rich brown of the 
meats, the snow-white bread, the fresh, golden butter, the 
cranberry sauce, with its bright, ruby tinge, were daintily 
mingled with plates of pies, arranged after a most tempting 
fashion. Golden custard, the deep red tart, the brown mince, 
and tawny orange color of the pumpkin, were placed in alter- 
nate wedges, and, radiating from the centre of each plate like 
a star, stood at equal distances round the table. Water 
sparkling from the well, currant wine brilliantly red, con- 



304 PUBLIC AND PAKLOR READINGS. 

trasted with the sheeted snow of the tablecloth ; and the 
gleam of crystal ; then that old arm-chair at the head of the 
table, with its soft crimson cushions. I tell you again, reader, 
it was a Thanksgiving dinner worthy to be remembered. 
That poor family from the miserable basement in New York 
did remember it for many a weary day after. Mrs. Gray re- 
membered it, for she had given delicious pleasure to those old 
people. She had, for that one day at least, lifted them from 
their toil and depression. 



THE WOLVES.— J. T. Trowbridge. 

TE that listen to stories told, 
When hearths are cheery and nights are cold, 
Of the lone woodside, and the hungry pack 
That howls on the fainting traveller's track, 
The flame-red eyeballs that waylay, 
By the wintry moon, the belated sleigh ; 
The lost child sought in the dismal wood, 
The little shoes, and the stains of blood 
On the trampled snow, — ye that hear 
With thrills of pity, or chills of fear, 
Wishing some kind angel had been sent 
To shield the hapless innocent, — 
Know ye the fiend that is crueller far 
Than the gaunt, gray herds of the forest are 1 
Swiftly vanish the wild fleet tracks 
Before the rifle and the woodman's axe. 
But hark to the coming of unseen feet, 
Pattering by night through the city street. 
Each wolf that dies in the woodland brown 
Lives a spectre, and haunts the town ! 
By square and market they slink and prowl, 
In lane and alley they leap and howl ; 
All night long they snuff and snarl before 



TSE WOLVES. 305 

The patched window and the broken door. 

They paw the clapboards, and claw the latch ; 

At every crevice they whine and scratch. 

Children, crouched in corners cold, 

Shiver, with tattered garments old ; 

They start from sleep with bitter pangs 

At the touch of the phantom's viewless fangs. 

Weary the mother, and worn with strife, 

Still she watches, and fights for life ; 

But her hand is feeble, and her weapon small, — 

One little needle, against them all. 

In evil hour the daughter fled 

From her poor shelter and wretched bed, 

Through the city's pitiless solitude 

To the door of sin, — the wolves pursued ! 

Fierce the father, and grim with want, 

His heart was gnawed by the spectres gaunt. 

Frenzied, stealing forth by night, 

With whetted knife for the desperate fight, 

He thought to strike the spectres dead, — 

But killed his brother man instead. 

ye that listen to stories told 

When hearths are cheery and nights are cold, 

Weep no more at the tales you hear, 

The danger is close, and the wolves are near J 

Shudder not at the murderer's name, 

Marvel not at the maiden's shame ; 

Pass not by, with averted eye, 

The door where the stricken children cry. 

But when the beat of the unseen feet 

Sound by night through the city street, 

Follow thou, where the spectres glide 

And stand, like hope, at the mother's side ; 

And be thyself the angel sent 

To shield the hapless innocent. 

He gives but little who gives his tears, 



306 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

He gives best who aids and cheers. 

He does well in the forest wild 

Who slays the monster and saves the child ; 

He does better, and merits more, 

Who drives the wolf from the poor man's door. 



THE BANNER OF THE COVENANTERS.— C. E. Norton. 

[One of the banners formerly belonging to the Covenanters is pre- 
served among other curiosities at Mareschal College, Aberdeen. It is 
of white silk, with the motto "Spe Expecto " in red letters.] 

WAKE ! wave aloft, thou Banner ! let every snowy fold 
Float on our wild, unconquered hills, as in the days 
of old ; 
Hang out, and give again to death a glory and a charm, 
Where heaven's pure dew may freshen thee, and heaven's pure 

sunshine warm. 
Wake ! wave aloft ! — I hear the silk low rustling on the 

breeze 
Which whistles through the lofty fir, and bends the birchen 

trees. 
I hear the tread of warriors armed to conquer or to die ; 
Their bed or bier the heathery hill, their canopy the sky. 

What, what is life or death to them 1 They only feel and know 
Freedom is to be struggled for, with an unworthy foe, — 
Their homes, — their hearths, — the all for which their fathers, 

too, have fought, 
And liberty to breathe the prayers their cradled lips were 

taught. 
On, on they rush, — like mountain streams resistlessly they 

sweep, — 
On ! those who live are heroes now, — and martyrs those who 

sleep ! 



THE BANNER OF THE COVENANTERS. 307 

While still the snow-white Banner waves above the field of 

strife, 
With a proud triumph, as it were a thing of soul and life. 

They stand, — they bleed, — they fall ! they make one brief 

and breathless pause, 
And gaze with fading eyes upon the standard of their 

cause ; — 
Again they brave the strife of death, again each weary limb 
Faintly obeys the warrior soul, though earth's best hopes grow 

dim ; — 
The mountain rills are red with blood ; the pure and quiet sky 
Kings with the shouts of those who win, the groans of those 

who die ; 
Taken, — retaken, — raised again, but soiled with clay and 

gore, 
Heavily, on the wild free breeze, that Banner floats once 

more. 

Heaven's dew hath drunk the crimson drops which on the 

heather lay, 
The rills that were so red with gore go sparkling on their 

way; 
The limbs that fought, the hearts that swelled, are crumbled 

into dust ; 
The souls which strove are gone to meet the spirits of the 

just ; — 
But that frail silken flag for which, and under which, they 

fought 
(And which e'en now retains its power upon the soul of 

thought) 
Survives, — a tattered, senseless thing, — to meet the curious 

eye, 
And wake a momentary dream of hopes and days gone by. 

A momentary dream ! 0, not for one poor transient hour, 
Not for a brief and hurried day that flag exerts its power ! 



308 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Full flashing on our dormant souls the firm conviction comes, 
That what our fathers did for theirs, we too could for our 

homes. 
"We, too, could brave the giant arm that seeks to chain each 

word, 
And rule what form of prayer alone shall by our God be heard ; 
We, too, in triumph or defeat, could drain our heart's best 

veins, 
While the good old cause of Liberty for Church and State 

remains ! 



HERVE KIEL. — Robert Browning. 

ON the sea and at the Hogue, sixteen hundred ninety-two, 
Did the English fight the French, — woe to France ! 
And, the thirty-first of May, helter-skelter through the blue, 
Like a crowd of frightened porpoises a shoal of sharks pursue, 

Came crowding ship on ship to St. Malo on the Ranee, 
With the English fleet in view. 

'T was the squadron that escaped, with the victor in full 
chase, 
First and foremost of the drove, in his great ship, Damfre- 
ville ; 
Close on him fled, great and small, 
Twenty-two good ships in all ; 
And they signalled to the place, 
" Help the winners of a race ! 

Get us guidance, give us harbor, take us quick, — or, 

quicker still, 
Here 's the English can and will ! " 

Then the pilots of the place put out brisk and leaped on 
board. 
" Why, what hope or chance have ships like these to pass ? " 
laughed they ; 



HERVE RIEL. 309 

"Rocks to starboard, rocks to port, all the passage scarred 

and scored, 
Shall the Formidable here, with her twelve and eighty guns, 
Think to make the river-mouth by the single narrow way. 
Trust to enter where 't is ticklish for a craft of twenty tons, 
And witli flow at full beside 1 
Now 't is slackest ebb of tide. 
Reach the mooring 1 Rather say f 
While rock stands or water runs, 
Not a ship will leave the bay ! " 

Then was called a council straight ; 

Brief and bitter the debate : 

" Here 's the English at our heels ; would you have them 

take in tow 
All that 's left us of the fleet, linked together stern and bow, 
For a prize to Plymouth Sound 1 
Better run the ships aground ! " 

(Ended Damfreville his speech.) 
" Not a minute more to wait ! 

Let the captains all and each 

Shove ashore, then blow up, burn the vessels on the beach ! 
France must undergo her fate." 

" Give the word ! " But no such word 
Was ever spoke or heard ; 

For up stood, for out stepped, for in struck amid all these, — - 
A captain 1 A lieutenant 1 A mate, — first, second, third 1 
No such man of mark, and meet 
With his betters to compete ! 

But a simple Breton sailor pressed by Tourville for the 
fleet, — 
A poor coasting-pilot he, Herve* Riel the Croisickese. 

And " What mockery or malice have we here 1 " cries Herve 
Riel; 
Are you mad, you Malouins 1 Are you cowards, fools, or 
rogues 1 



310 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Talk to me of rocks and shoals, me who took the soundings, 

tell 
On my fingers every bank, every shallow, every swell 

'Twixt the offing here and Greve, where the river disem- 
bogues 1 
Are you bought by English gold 1 Is it love the lying 's for 1 
Morn and eve, night and day, 
Have I piloted your bay, 
Entered free and anchored fast at the foot of Solidor. 

Burn the fleet, and ruin France ] That were worse than 
fifty Hogues ! 
Sirs, tbey know I speak the truth! Sirs, believe me, 
there 's a way ] 
Only let me lead the line, 

Have the biggest ship to steer, 
Get this Formidable clear, 
Make the others follow mine, 

And I lead them most and least by a passage I know well, 
Right to Solidor, past Greve, 

And there lay them safe and sound ; 
And if one ship misbehave, — 

Keel so much as grate the ground, — 
Why, I 've nothing but my life ; here 's my head ! " cries 
Herve Kiel. 

Not a minute more to wait. 

" Steer us in, then, small and great ! 

Take the helm, lead the line, save the squadron ! " cried its 
chief. 
Captains, give the sailor place ! 

He is admiral, in brief. 
Still the north-wind, by God's grace. 
See the noble fellow's face 
As the big ship, with a bound, 
Clears the entry like a hound, 

Keeps the passage as its inch of way were the wide sea'a 
profound ! 



HERVE KIEL 311 

See, safe through shoal and rock, 

How they follow in a flock. 
Not a ship that misbehaves, not a keel that grates the 
ground, 

Not a spar that comes to grief ! 
The peril, see, is past, 
All are harbored to the last ; 

And just as Herve Riel hollas " Anchor ! " — sure as fate, 
Up the English come, too late. 

So the storm subsides to calm ; 

They see the green trees wave 

On the heights o'erlooking Greve : 
Hearts that bled are stanched with balm. 
" Just our rapture to enhance, 

Let the English rake the bay, 
Gnash their teeth and glare askance 

As they cannonade away ! ' 
'Neath rampired Solidor pleasant riding on the Ranee ! " 
How hope succeeds despair on each captain's countenance I 
Outburst all with one accord, 

" This is Paradise for Hell ! 
Let France, let France's King 
Thank the man that did the thing ! " 
What a shout, and all one word, 

" Herve Riel," 
As he stepped in front once more, 

Not a symptom of surprise 

In the frank blue Breton eyes, 
Just the same man as before. 

Then said Damfreville, " My friend, 
I must speak out at the end, 

Though I find the speaking hard : 
Praise is deeper than the lips ; 
You have saved the king his ships, 

You must name your own reward. 



312 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Faith, our sun was near eclipse ! 
Demand whate'er you will, 
France remains your debtor still. 

Ask to heart's content, and have ! or my name 's not Damfre- 
ville." 

Then a beam of fun outbroke 
On the bearded mouth that spoke, 
As the honest heart laughed through 
Those frank eyes of Breton blue : 
" Since I needs must say my say, 

Since on board the duty 's done, 

And from Malo Roads to Croisic Point, what is it but a 
run? — 
Since *t is ask and have I may, — 

Since the others go ashore, — 
Come ! A good whole holiday ! 

Leave to go and see my wife, whom I call the Belle 
Aurore ! " 

That he asked, and that he got, — nothing more. 

Name and deed alike are lost ; 
Not a pillar nor a post 

In his Croisic keeps alive the feat as it befell ; 
Not a head in white and black 
On a single fishing-smack, 
In memory of the man but for whom had gone to wrack 

All that France saved from the fight whence England bore 
the bell. 
Go to Paris ; rank on rank 

Search the heroes flung pell-mell 
On the Louvre, face and flank ; 

You shall look long enough ere you come to Herv6 Riel. 
So, for better and for worse, 
Herve Riel, accept my verse ! 
In my verse, Herve* Riel, do thou once more 
Save the squadron, honor France, love thy wife the Bell© 
Aurore ! 



THE BESIEGED CASTLE. 313 



THE BESIEGED CASTLE. — Scott. 

[Ivanhoe, an English knight, has been taken prisoner by the Nor- 
mans, and is lying wounded and helpless in a chamber of the castle, 
under the care of Rebecca, the Jewess, who is also a prisoner.] 

IN finding herself once more by the side of Ivanhoe, Re- 
becca was astonished at the keen sensation of pleasure 
which she experienced, even at a time when all around them 
both was danger, if not despair. As she felt his pulse, and 
inquired after his health, there was a softness in her touch 
and in her accents, implying a kinder interest than she would 
herself have been pleased to have voluntarily expressed. Her 
voice faltered and her hand trembled, and it was only the cold 
question of Ivanhoe, "Is it you, gentle maiden % " which re- 
called her to herself, and reminded her the sensations which 
she felt were not and could not be mutual. A sigh escaped, 
but it w r as scarce audible ; and the questions which she asked 
the knight concerning his state of health were put in the tone 
of calm friendship. Ivanhoe answered her hastily that he was, 
in point of health, as well and better than he could have 
expected, — " thanks," he said, " dear Rebecca, to thy help- 
ful skill." 

"He calls me dear Rebecca," said the maiden to herself, 
"but it is in the cold and careless tone which ill suits the 
word. His war-horse, his hunting hound, are dearer to him 
than the despised Jewess ! " 

" My mind, gentle maiden," continued Ivanhoe, " is more 
disturbed by anxiety than my body with pain. From the 
speeches of these men who were my warders just now, I learn 
that I am a prisoner, and, if I judge aright of the loud hoarse 
voice which even now despatched them hence on some mili- 
tary duty, I am in the castle of Front-de-Boeuf. If so, how 
will this end, or how can I protect Rowena and my father % " 

" He names not the Jew or Jewess," said Rebecca, internal- 
ly j " yet what is our portion in him, and how justly am I 
punished by Heaven for letting my thoughts dwell upon. 



314 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

him ! " She hastened, after this brief self-accusation, to give 
Ivanhoe what information she could ; but it amounted only 
to this, that the Templar Bois-Guilbert and the Baron Front- 
de-Boeuf were commanders within the castle ; that it was 
beleaguered from without, but by whom she knew not. 

The voices of the knights were heard, animating their fol- 
lowers, or directing means of defence, while their commands 
were often drowned in the clashing of armor, or the clamor- 
ous shouts of those whom they addressed. Tremendous as 
these sounds were, and yet more terrible from the awful event 
which they presaged, there was a sublimity mixed with them, 
which Rebecca's high-toned mind could feel even in that mo- 
ment of terror. Her eye kindled, although the blood fled 
from her cheeks ; and there was a strong mixture of fear and 
of a thrilling sense of the sublime, as she repeated, half whis- 
pering to herself, half speaking to her companion, the sacred 
text, — " The quiver rattleth, the glittering spear and the 
shield, the noise of the captains and the shouting ! " 

But Ivanhoe was like the war-horse of that sublime pas- 
sage, glowing with impatience at his inactivity, and with his 
ardent desire to mingle in the affray of which these sounds 
were the introduction. "If I could but drag myself," he 
said, " to yonder window, that I might see how this brave 
game is like to go, — if I had but a bow to shoot a shaft, c r 
battle-axe to strike were it but a single blow for our deliver- 
ance ! It is vain, — it is vain, — I am alike nerveless and 
weaponless ! " 

" Fret not thyself, noble knight," answered Rebecca ; "the 
sounds have ceased of a sudden, — it may be they join not 
battle." 

" Thou knowest naught of it," said Ivanhoe, impatiently ; 
" this dead pause only shows that the men are at their posts 
on the walls, and expecting an instant attack ; what we have 
heard was but the distant muttering of the storm, — it will 
burst anon in all its fury. Could I but reach yonder win- 
dow ! " 

"Thou wilt but injure thyself by the attempt, noble 



THE BESIEGED CASTLE. 315 

knight," replied his attendant. Observing his extreme solici- 
tude, she firmly added, " I myself will stand at the lattice, 
and describe to you as I can what passes without." 

"You must not, — you shall not!" exclaimed Ivanhoe; 
"each lattice, each aperture, will be soon a mark for the 
archers ; some random shaft — " 

" It shall be welcome J " murmured Rebecca, as with firm 
pace she ascended two or three steps, which led to the win- 
dow of which they spoke. 

" Rebecca, dear Rebecca ! " exclaimed Ivanhoe, " this is no 
maiden's pastime, — do not expose thyself to wounds and 
death, and render me forever miserable for having given the 
occasion; at least, cover thyself with yonder ancient buck- 
ler, and show as little of your person at the lattice as may 
be." 

Following with wonderful promptitude the directions of 
Ivanhoe, and availing herself of the protection of the large 
ancient shield, which she placed against the lower part of the 
window, Rebecca, with tolerable security to herself, could 
witness part of what was passing without the castle, and re- 
port to Ivanhoe the preparations which the assailants were 
making for the storm. She could observe, from the number 
of men placed for the defence of this post, that the besieged 
entertained apprehensions for its safety ; and from the mus- 
tering of the assailants in a direction nearly opposite to the 
outwork, it seemed no less plain that it had been selected as 
a vulnerable point of attack. 

These appearances she hastily communicated to Ivanhoe, 
and added, " The skirts of the wood seem lined with archers, 
although only a few are advanced from its dark shadow." 

" Under what banner 1 " asked Ivanhoe. 

" Under no ensign of war which I can observe," answered 
Rebecca. 

" A singular novelty," muttered the knight, " to advance to 
storm such a castle without pennon or banner displayed ! 
Seest thou who they be that act as leaders'?" 

"A knight, clad in sable armor, is the most conspicuous," 



316 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

said the Jewess ; "he alone is armed from head to heel, and 
seems to assume the direction of all around him." 

" What device does he bear on his shield ] " replied Ivan- 
hoe. 

" Something resembling a bar of iron, and a padlock painted 
blue on the black shield ! " 

" A fetterlock and shacklebolt azure," said Ivanhoe j " I 
know not who may bear the device, but well I ween it might 
now be mine own. Canst thou not see the motto 1 " 

" Scarce the device itself at this distance," replied Rebecca ; 
" but when the sun glances fair upon his shield, it shows as I 
tell you." 

" Seem there no other leaders 1 " exclaimed the anxious in- 
quirer. 

" None of mark and distinction that I can behold from this 
station," said Rebecca; " but, doubtless, the other side of the 
castle is also assailed. They appear even now preparing to 
advance. God of Zion, protect us ! What a dreadful sight ! 
Those who advance first bear huge shields, and defences made 
of plank ; the others follow, bending their bows as they come 
on. They raise their bows ! God of Moses, forgive the crea- 
tures thou hast made ! " 

Her description was here suddenly interrupted by the sig' 
nal for assault, which was given by the blast of a shrill bugle, 
and at once answered by a flourish of the Norman trumpets 
from the battlements, which, mingled with the deep and hol- 
low clang of the kettle-drums, retorted in notes of defiance 
the challenge of the enemy. The shouts of both parties aug- 
mented the fearful din, the assailants crying, " Saint George 
for merry England ! " and the Normans answering them with 
cries of " En avant De Bracy ! — Beau-seant ! Beau-seant ! — 
Front-de-Boeuf a la rescousse ! " according to the war-cries of 
their different commanders. 

" And I must lie here like a bedridden monk," exclaimed 
Ivanhoe, " while the game that gives me freedom or death is 
played out by the hand of others ! Look from the window 
once again, kind maiden, but beware that you are not marked 



THE BESIEGED CASTLE. 317 

by the archers beneath. Look out once more, and tell me if 
they yet advance to the storm." 

With patient courage, strengthened by the interval which 
she had employed in mental devotion, Rebecca again took post 
at the lattice, sheltering herself, however, so as not to be visi- 
ble from beneath. 

"What dost thou see, Rebecca 1" again demanded the 
wounded knight. 

"Nothing but the cloud of arrows flying so thick as to 
dazzle mine eyes, and to hide the bowmen who shoot them." 

" That cannot endure," said Ivanhoe ; " if they press not 
right on to carry the castle by pure force of arms, the archery 
may avail but little against stone walls and bulwarks. Look 
for the Knight of the Fetterlock, fair Rebecca, and see how 
he bears himself; for as the leader is, so will his followers 
be." 

"I see him not," said Rebecca. 

" Foul craven ! " exclaimed Ivanhoe ; " does he blench from 
the helm when the wind blows highest 1 " 

" He blenches not ! he blenches not ! " said Rebecca. " I see 
him now ; he heads a body of men close under the outer bar- 
rier of the barbican. They pull down the piles and palisades ; 
they hew down the barriers with axes. His high black plume 
floats abroad over the throng, like a raven over the field of 
the slain. They have made a breach in the barriers, — they 
rush in, — they are thrust back ! Front-de-Bceuf heads the 
defenders; I see his gigantic form above the press. They 
throng again to the breach, and the pass is disputed hand to 
hand, and man to man. God of Jacob ! it is the meeting of 
two fierce tides, — the conflict of two oceans moved by adverse 
winds ! " 

She turned her head from the lattice, as if unable longer to 
endure a sight so terrible. 

"Look forth again, Rebecca," said Ivanhoe, mistaking the 
cause of her retiring ; " the archery must in some degree have 
ceased, since they are now fighting hand to hand. Look again, 
there is now less danger." 



318 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Rebecca again looked forth, and almost immediately ex- 
claimed, " Holy prophets of the law ! Front-de-Bceuf and the 
Black Knight fight hand to hand on the breach, amid the 
roar of their followers, who watch the progress of the strife. 
Heaven strike with the canse of the oppressed and of the 
captive ! " She then uttered a loud shriek, and exclaimed, 
" He is down ! — he is down ! " 

" Who is down 1 " cried Ivanhoe ; " for our dear Lady's 
sake, tell me which has fallen 1 " 

" The Black Knight," answered Rebecca, faintly ; then in- 
stantly again shouted with joyful eagerness, " But no, — but 
no ! — the name of the Lord of Hosts be blessed ! — he is on 
foot again, and fights as if there were twenty men's strength 
in his single arm. His sword is broken, — he snatches an axe 
from a yeoman, — he presses Front-de-Boeuf with blow on 
blow. The giant stoops and totters like an oak under the 
steel of the woodman, — he falls, — he falls ! " 

" Front-de-Bceuf ! " exclaimed Ivanhoe. 

" Front-de-Boeuf ! " answered the Jewess ; " his men rush to 
the rescue, headed by the haughty Templar, — their united 
force compels the champion to pause, — they drag Front-de- 
Bceuf within the walls." 

" The assailants have won the barriers, have they not 1 " said 
Ivanhoe. 

" They have, — they have ! " exclaimed Rebecca, "and they 
press the besieged hard upon the outer wall ; some plant lad- 
ders, some swarm like bees, and endeavor to ascend upon the 
shoulders of each other, — down go stones, beams, and trunks 
of trees upon their heads, and as fast as they bear the 
wounded to the rear, fresh men supply their places in the 
assault. Great God ! hast thou given men thine own image, 
that it should be thus cruelly defaced by the hands of their 
brethren 1 " 

" Think not of that," said Ivanhoe ; " this is no time for 
such thoughts. Who yield 1 — who push their way 1 " 

" The ladders are thrown down," replied Rebecca, shudder- 
ing ; " the soldiers lie grovelling under them like crushed 
reptiles. The besieged have the better." 



THE BESIEGED CASTLE. 319 

u Saint George strike for us ! " exclaimed the knight ; " do 
the false yeomen give way 1 " 

" No ! " exclaimed Rebecca, " they bear themselves right 
yeomanly. The Black Knight approaches the postern with 
his huge axe, — the thundering blows which he deals, you 
may hear them above all the din and shouts of the battle. 
Stones and beams are hailed down on the bold champion, — 
he regards them no more than if they were thistle-down or 
feathers ! " 

" By Saint John of Acre," said Ivanhoe, raising himself 
joyfully on his couch, " methought there was but one man in 
England that might do such a deed ! " 

" The postern-gate shakes," continued Rebecca ; " it crashes, 
— it is splintered by his blows, — they rush in, — the out- 
work is won, — God ! — they hurl the defenders from the 
battlements, — they throw them into the moat. men, if 
ye be indeed men, spare them that can resist no longer ! " 

" The bridge, — the bridge which communicates with the 
castle, — have they won that pass 1 " exclaimed Ivanhoe. 

"No," replied Rebecca, "the Templar has destroyed the 
plank on which they crossed, — few of the defenders escaped 
with him into the castle, — the shrieks and cries which you 
hear tell the fate of the others, — alas ! I see it is still more 
difficult to look upon victory than upon battle." 

" What do they now, maiden 1 " said Ivanhoe ; " look forth 
yet again, — this is no time to faint at bloodshed." 

" It is over for the time," answered Rebecca ; " our friends 
strengthen themselves within the outwork which they have 
mastered ; and it affords them so good a shelter from the 
foemen's shot, that the garrison only bestow a few bolts on 
it from interval to interval, as if rather to disquiet than 
effectually to injure them." 

" Our friends," said Ivanhoe, " will surely not abandon an 
enterprise so gloriously begun and so happily attained. 
no ! I will put my faith in the good knight whose axe hath 
rent heart-of-oak and bars of iron. Seest thou naught else, 
Rebecca, by which the Black Knight may be distinguished 1 * 



320 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

" Nothing," said the Jewess ; " all about him is black as 
the wing of the night raven. Nothing can I spy that can 
mark him further, — but having once seen him put forth his 
strength in battle, methinks I could know him again among a 
thousand warriors. He rushes to the fray as if he were sum- 
moned to a banquet. There is more than mere strength ; 
there seems as if the whole soul and spirit of the champion 
were given to every blow which he deals upon his enemies. It 
is fearful, yet magnificent, to behold how the arm and heart 
of one man can triumph over hundreds." 

" Rebecca," said Ivanhoe, " thou hast painted a hero ; 
surely they rest but to refresh their force, or to provide the 
means of crossing the moat. Under such a leader as thou 
hast spoken this knight to be, there are no craven fears, no 
cold-blooded delays, no yielding up a gallant emprise ; since 
the difficulties which render it arduous render it also glorious. 
I swear by the honor of my house, I vow by the name of 
my bright lady-love, would endure ten years' captivity to 
fight one day by that good knight's side in such a quarrel as 
this ! " 

" Alas ! " said Rebecca, leaving her station at the window, 
and approaching the couch of the wounded knight, " this im- 
patient yearning after action, this struggling with and re- 
pining at your present weakness, will not fail to injure your 
returning health. How couldst thou hope to inflict wounds 
on others ere that be healed which thou thyself hast re- 
ceived ? " 

" Rebecca," he replied, " thou knowest not how impossible 
it is for one trained to actions of chivalry to remain passive 
as a priest or a woman, when they are acting deeds of honor 
around him. The love of battle is the food upon which we 
Jive, — the dust of the melee is the breath of our nostrils ! 
We live not, we wish not to live longer than while we are 
victorious and renowned. Such, maiden, are the laws of 
chivalry to which we are sworn, and to which we offer all that 
we hold dear. 

"Thou art no Christian, Rebecca; and to thee are un- 



THE BESIEGED CASTLE. 321 

known those high feelings which swell the bosom of a noble 
maiden when her lover hath done some deed of emprise 
which sanctions his flame. Chivalry ! — why, maiden, she 
is the nurse of pure and high affection, the stay of the 
oppressed, the redresser of grievances, the curb of the power 
of the tyrant. Nobility were but an empty name without 
her, and liberty finds the best protection in her lance and 
her sword." 

" How little he knows this bosom," she said, " to imagine 
that cowardice or meanness of soul must needs be its guests, 
because I have censured the fantastic chivalry of the Naza- 
renes! Would to Heaven that the shedding of mine own 
blood, drop by drop, could redeem the captivity of Judah ! 
Nay, would to God it could avail to set free my father, and 
this his benefactor, from the chains of the oppressor ! The 
proud Christian should then see whether the daughter of 
God's chosen people dared not to die as bravely as the vainest 
Nazarene maiden, that boasts her descent from some petty 
chieftain of the rude and frozen North ! " 

She then looked toward the couch of the wounded knight. 

" He sleeps," she said ; " nature exhausted by sufferance 
and the waste of spirits, his wearied frame embraces the first 
moment of temporary relaxation to sink into slumber. Alas ! 
is it a crime that I should look upon him, when it may be 
for the last time 1 When yet but a short space, and those fair 
features will be no longer animated by the bold and buoyant 
spirit which forsakes them not even in sleep ! But I will tear 
this folly from my heart, though every fibre bleed as I rend it 
away ! " 

She wrapped herself closely in her veil, and sat down at a 
distance from the couch of the wounded knight, with her 
back turned towards it, fortifying, or endeavoring to fortify 
her mind, not only against the impending evils from without, 
but also against those treacherous feelings which assailed her 
from within. 

Ivanhoe was awakened from his brief slumber by the noise 
of the battle ; and his attendant, who had, at his anxious de- 
14* u 



322 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

sire, again placed herself at the window to watch and report 
to him the fate of the attack, was for some time prevented 
from observing either, by the increase of the smouldering and 
stifling vapor. At length the volumes of smoke which rolled 
into the apartment, the cries for water, which were heard 
even above the din of the battle, made them sensible of the 
progress of this new danger. 

" The castle burns," said Rebecca; " it burns ! What can 
we do to save ourselves 1 " 

" Fly, Rebecca, and save thine own life," said Ivanhoe, "for 
no human aid can avail me." 

" I will not fly," answered Rebecca ; " we will be saved or 
perish together ! " 

At this moment the door of the apartment flew open, and 
the Templar presented himself, — a ghastly figure, for his 
gilded armor was broken and bloody, and the plume was part- 
ly shorn away, partly burnt from his casque. " I have found 
thee," said he to Rebecca. " There is but one path to safety ; 
I have cut my way through fifty dangers to point it to thee, 
— up, and instantly follow me." 

" Alone," answered Rebecca, " I will not follow thee. If 
thou hast but a touch of human charity in thee, if thy 
heart be not as hard as thy breastplate, save this wounded 
knight ! " 

" A knight," answered the Templar, with his characteristic 
calmness, — "a knight, Rebecca, must encounter his fate, 
whether it meet him in the shape of sword or flame." 

So saying, he seized on the terrified maiden. 

At that instant the Black Knight entered the apart- 
ment. 

" If thou be'st true knight," said Ivanhoe, " think not of 
me, save the Lady Rowena, look to the noble Cedric ! " 

" In their turn," answered he of the fetterlock ; " but thine 
is first." 

And, seizing upon Ivanhoe, he bore him off with as much 
ease as the Templar had carried off Rebecca, rushed with him 
to the pDstern, and having there delivered his burden to the 



A VISION OF BATTLE. 323 

care of two yeomen, he again entered the castle to assist in 
the rescue of the other prisoners. 

One turret was now in bright flames, which flashed out 
furiously from window and shot-hole. 

The towering flames had soon surmounted every obstruc- 
tion, and rose to the evening skies one huge and burning bea- 
con, seen far and wide through the adjacent country. Tower 
after tower crashed down, with blazing roof and rafter ; and 
the combatants were driven from the court-yard. The van- 
quished, of whom very few remained, scattered and escaped 
into the neighboring wood. The victors, assembling in large 
bands, gazed with wonder, not unmixed with fear, upon the 
flames, in which their own ranks and arms glanced dusky red. 
At length, with a terrific crash, the whole turret gave way. 
The voice of Locksley was then heard, " Shout, yeomen ! — 
the den of tyrants is no more ! " 



A VISION OF BATTLE. — S. Dobell. 

HIST ! I see the stir of glamour far upon the twilight 
wold. 
Hist ! I see the vision rising ! List ! and as I speak behold ! 
These dull mists are mists of morning, and behind yon east- 
ern hill 
The hot sun abides my bidding ; he shall melt them when I 

will. 
All the night that now is past, the foe hath labored for the day, 
Creeping through the stealthy dark, like a tiger to his prey. 

Throw this window wider ! Strain thine eyes along the dusky 

vale ! 
Art thou cold with horror 1 Has thy bearded cheek grown 

pale? 
'T is the total Eussian host, flooding up the solemn plain 
Secret as a silent sea, mighty as a moving main ! 



324 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

my country ! is there none to rouse thee to the rolling 

sight i 
thou gallant sentinel who hast watched so oft, so well, must 

thou sleep this only night ] 
So hath the shepherd lain on a rock above a plain, 
Nor beheld the flood that swelled from some embowelled 

mount of woe, 
Waveless, foamless, sure, and slow, 
Silent o'er the vale below, 

Till nigher still and nigher comes the seethe of fields on fire, 
And the thrash of falling trees, and the steam of rivers dry, 
And before the burning flood the wild things of the wood 
Skulk and scream and fight and fall and flee and fly. 

A gun ! and then a gun ! I' the far and early sun 

Dost thou see by yonder tree a fleeting redness rise, 
As if, one after one, ten poppies red had blown, 

And shed in a blinking of the eyes 1 
They have started from their rest with a bayonet at eacb 
breast, 

Those watchers of the west who shall never watch again ! 
'T is naught to die, but 0, God's pity on the woe 

Of dying hearts that know they die in vain ! 
Beyond yon backward height that meets their dying sight, 

A thousand tents are white, and a slumbering army lies. 
" Brown Bess," the sergeant cries, as he loads her while he 

dies, 
" Let this devil's deluge reach them, and the good old cause 

is lost." 
He dies upon the word, but his signal gun is heard, 

Yon ambush green is stirred, yon laboring leaves are tost, 
And a sudden sabre waves, and like dead from opened graves, 

A hundred men stand up to meet a host. 
Dumb as death, with bated breath, 
Calm upstand that fearless band, 

And the dear old native land, like a dream of sudden 



A VISION OF BATTLE. 325 

Passes by each manly eye that is fixed so stern and dry 
On the tide of battle rolling up the steep. 

They hold their silent ground, I can hear each fatal sound 
Upon that summer mound which the morning sunshine 
warms, 
The word so brief and shrill that rules them like a will, 
The sough of moving limbs, and the clank and ring of 
arms. 
" Fire ! " and round that green knoll the sudden war-clouds 
roll, 
And from the tyrant's ranks so fierce an answering blast 
Of whirling death came back that the green trees turned to 
black, 
And dropped their leaves in winter as it passed. 

A moment on each side the surging smoke is wide, 

Between the fields are green, and around the hills are 
loud, 
But a shout breaks out, and lo ! they have rushed upon the 
foe, 
As the living lightning leaps from cloud to cloud. 
Fire and flash, smoke and crash, 
The fogs of battle close o'er friends and foes, and they are 

gone ! 
Alas, thou bright-eyed boy ! alas, thou mother's joy ! 

With thy long hair so fair, that didst so bravely lead them 
on ! 

I faint with pain and fear. Ah, Heaven ! what do I hear? 

A trumpet-note so near 1 
What are these that race like hunters at a chase 1 

Who are these that run a thousand men as one 1 
What are these that crash the trees far in the waving rear 1 
Fight on, thou young hero ! there 's help upon the way ! 
The light horse are coming, the great guns are coming, 

The Highlanders are coming; — good God, give us the day ! 



326 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Hurrah for the brave and the leal ! Hurrah for the strong 

and the true ! 
Hurrah for the helmets of steel ! Hurrah for the bonnets o' 

blue ! 

A run and a cheer, the Highlanders are here ! a gallop and a 

cheer, the light horse are here ! 
A rattle and a cheer, the great guns are here ! 

With a cheer they wheel round and face the foe ! 
As the troopers wheel about, their long swords are out, 
With a trumpet and a shout, in they go ! 
Like a yawning ocean green, the huge host gulfs them in, 

But high o'er the rolling of the flood, 
Their sabres you may see like lights upon the sea 

When the red sun is going down in blood. 

As on some Scottish shore, with mountains frowning o'er, 

The sudden tempests roar from the glen, 
And roll the tumbling sea in billows to the lee, 

Came the charge of the gallant Highlandmen ! 
And as one beholds the sea, though the wind he cannot see, 

But by the waves that flee knows its might, 
So I tracked the Highland blast by the sudden tide that past 

O'er the wild and rolling vast of the fight. 
Yes, glory be to God ! they have stemmed the foremost flood ! 

I lay me on the sod and breathe again ! 
In the precious moments won, the bugle-call has gone 

To the tents where it never rang in vain, 
And lo, the landscape wide is red from side to side, 

And all the might of England loads the plain ! 

Like a hot and bloody dawn, across the horizon drawn, 
While the host of darkness holds the misty vale, 

As glowing and as grand our bannered legions stand, 
And England's flag unfolds upon the gale I 

At that great sign unfurled, as morn moves o'er the world 
When God lifts his standard of light, 



HARMOSAN. 327 

With a tumult and a voice, and a rushing mighty noise, 
Our long line moves forward to the fight. 

Clarion and clarion defying, 

Sounding, resounding, replying, 

Trumpets braying, pipers playing, chargers neighing, 

Near and far 

The to-and-fro storm of the never-done hurrahing, 

Through the bright weather-banner and feather rising and 

falling, bugle and life 
Calling, recalling, — for death or for life, — 
Our host moved on to the war, 

While England, England, England, England, England ! 
Was blown from line to line near and far, 
And like the morning sea, our bayonets you might see, 
Come beaming, gleaming, streaming, 
Streaming, gleaming, beaming, 
Beaming, gleaming, streaming, to the war. 

Clarion and clarion defying, 

Sounding, resounding, replying, 

Trumpets braying, pipers playing, chargers neighing, 

Near and far 

The to-and-fro storm of the never-done hurrahing, 

Through the bright weather, banner and feather rising and 

falling, bugle and fife 
Calling, recalling, — for death or for life, — 
Our long line moved forward to the war. 



HARMOSAN. — Dean Trench. 

""VTOW the third and fatal conflict for the Persian throne 
X-y was done, 

And the Moslem's fiery valor had the crowning victory won. 
Harmosan, the last and boldest the invader to defy, 
Captive, overborne by numbers, they were bringing forth to die 



328 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Then exclaimed that noble captive, " Lo, I perish in my thirst ; 

Give me but one drink of water, and let then arrive the 
worst ! " 

In his hand he took the goblet ; but awhile the draught for- 
bore, 

Seeming doubtfully the purpose of the foeman to explore. 

Well might then have paused the bravest, for around him 

angry foes, 
With a hedge of naked weapons, did that lonely man enclose. 
" But what fearest thou ] " cried the caliph. " Is it, friend, a 

secret blow 1 ? 
Fear it not ! our gallant Moslems no such treacherous dealing 

know. 

" Thou mayst quench thy thirst securely, for thou shalt not 

die before 
Thou hast drunk that cup of water, — this reprieve is thine, 

— no more ! " 
Quick the satrap dashed the goblet down to earth with ready 

hand, 
And the liquid sank forever, lost amid the burning sand. 

*' Thou hast said that mine my life is, till the water of that 

cup 
I have drained ; then bid thy servants that spilled water 

gather up ! " 
iFor a moment stood the caliph as by doubtful passions 

stirred, — 
Then exclaimed, " Forever sacred must remain a monarch's 

word. 

"Bring another cup, and straightway to the noble Persian 

give; 
Drink, I said before, and perish, — now I bid thee drink and 

live ! " 



OUR COUNTRY SAVED. 329 



OUR COUNTRY SAVED. — J. R. Lowell. 

BOOM, cannon, boom to all the winds and waves ! 
Clash out, glad bells, from every rocking steeple ! 
Banners, advance with triumph, bend your staves ! 

And from every mountain-peak 

Let beacon-fire to answering beacon speak, 

Katahdin tell Monadnock, Whiteface he, 
And so leap on in light from sea to sea, 

Till the glad news be sent 

Across a kindling continent, 
Making earth feel more firm and air breathe braver : 
Be proud ! for she is saved, and all have helped to save her ! 

She that lifts up the manhood of the poor, 
She of the open soul and open door, 
With room about her hearth for all mankind ! 
The fire is dreadful in her eyes no more ; 
From her bold front the helm she doth unbind, 
Sends all her handmaid armies back to spin, 
And bids her navies, that so lately hurled 
Their crashing battle, to hold their thunders in, 
Swimming like birds of calm along the unharmful shore. 

No challenge sends she to the elder world, 
That looked askance and hated ; a light scorn 
Plays o'er her mouth, as round her mighty knees 
She calls her children back, and waits the morn 
Of nobler day, enthroned between her subject seas. 

Bow down, dear land, for thou hast found release ! 

Thy God, in these distempered days, 

Hath taught thee the sure wisdom of His ways, 
And through thine enemies hath wrought thee peace ! 

Bow down in prayer and praise ! 
No poorest in thy borders but may now 
Lift to the juster skies a man's enfranchised brow. 



330 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Beautiful ! my Country ! ours once more ! 
Smoothing thy gold of war-dishevelled hair 
O'er such sweet brows as never other wore, 
And letting thy set lips 
Freed from wrath's pale eclipse, 
The rosy edges of their smile lay bare, 
What words divine of lover or of poet 
Could tell our love and make thee know it, 
Among the nations bright beyond compare 1 
What were our lives without thee 1 
What all our lives to save thee 1 
We reck not what we gave the© ; 
We will not dare to doubt thee, 
But ask whatever else, and we will dare ! 



THE BLUE AND THE GRAY.— F. M. Finch. 

[The women of Columbus, Mississippi, animated by nobler sentiments 
than are many of their sisters, have shown themselves impartial in their 
offerings made to the memory of the dead. They strewed flowers alike 
on the graves of the Confederate and of the National soldiers.] 

BY the flow of the inland river, 
Whence the fleets of iron have fled, 
Where the blades of the grave-grass quiver, 
Asleep are the ranks of the dead ; — 
Under the sod and the dew, 

Waiting the judgment day ; — 
Under the one, the Blue ; 
Under the other, the Gray. 

These in the robings of glory, 

Those in the gloom of defeat, 
All with the battle-blood gory, 
, In the dusk of eternity meet ; — 
Under the sod and the dew, 
Waiting the judgment day ; — 



THE BLUE AND THE GRAY. 331 

Under the laurel, the Blue ; 
Under the willow, the Gray. 

From the silence of sorrowful hours 

The desolate mourners go, 
Lovingly laden with flowers 

Alike for the friend and the foe , — ■ 
Under the sod and the dew, 

Waiting the judgment day ; — • 
Under the roses, the Blue ; 
Under the lilies, the Gray. 

So with an equal splendor 

The morning sun-rays fall, 
With a touch, impartially tender, 

On the blossoms blooming for all ; — • 
Under the sod and the dew, 

Waiting the judgment day ; — 
'Broidered with gold, the Blue ; 
Mellowed with gold, the Gray. 

So, when the summer calleth, 
On forest and field of grain 
With an equal murmur falleth 
The cooling drip of the rain ; — 
Under the sod and the dew, 

Waiting the judgment day ; — 
Wet with the rain, the Blue ; 
Wet with the rain, the Gray. 

Sadly, but not with upbraiding, 
The generous deed was done ; 
In the storm of the years that are fading, 
No braver battle was won ; — 
Under the sod and the dew, 

Waiting the judgment day ; — 
Under the blossoms, the Blue ; 
Under the garlands, the Gray. 



332 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

No more shall the war-cry sever, 
Or the winding rivers be red ; 
They banish our anger forever 

When they laurel the graves of our dead ! 
Under the sod and the dew, 

Waiting the judgment day ; — 
Love and tears for the Blue, 
Tears and love for the Gray. 



THE SENTRY ON THE TO WER. — Sacristan's Household. 
[This incident really occurred in the German war of 1866.] 

MIDNIGHT sounded with a thin, jangling voice from the 
belfry of the old tower of the church at Goldenau as 
Otto Hemmerich, having toiled up the winding, narrow stone 
staircase, stepped out upon the roof, prepared to watch through 
his term of sentinel duty in the dark solitude. Under his feet 
was the leaden roof, weather-scarred and stained. The plat- 
form whereon he could pace was rectangular and very limited. 
It was bounded on the outer side by a low parapet, scarcely 
reaching to his knee as he stood. 

From the centre of the square tower sprang a tapering 
spire, which rose to no great height, and was surmounted by 
a creaking weathercock of gilded copper. Thus, whoso ven- 
tured to climb the steep, winding stair, and issue forth on the 
roof of the belfry by a low, straight doorway, found himself 
on the narrow strip of leaden roofing which surrounded the 
spire. To the summit of the spire itself there was no in- 
terior way of arriving. 

One, two, three, and so on up to twelve, sounded the bell 
below. The bell, which was the clock's voice, hung nearly ten 
feet lower than the summit of the tower. Its tone was, as I 
have said, thin and jangling ; yet more thin and jangling were 
the bells which chimed the quarters, — ting tang, ting tang, 
ting tang, ting tang, — like the querulous voice of an old 



THE SENTRY ON THE TOWER. 333 

man. Thus they sounded to one listening down in the vil- 
lage. Heard nearer, — in the belfry itself, — they had more 
resonance ; and there remained, after the clappers had ceased 
to swing, a loug, quivering vibration, which seemed to pulse 
in the very core of the ancient stone-work, and the mouldering 
beams, and the dry, cracked tiling. 

Otto stood by the parapet looking to the southeast as 
the last hum of the twelfth stroke died away in his ear. 
The night was dark and moonless ; too dark for it to be 
possible to see the landscape stretching far below. It was 
warm, too, as it had been all day ; although at that height, 
and in the neighborhood of the mountain range, there was not 
wanting a certain freshness in the air. 

Looking downward, all dark, all blank. Only straining his 
eyes as they grew used to the dimness, Otto could discern a 
faint, steely gleam from the river, looking as though some 
soldier had dropped his bright bayonet upon the peaceful 
meadows. Here and there a blacker spot gloomed mys- 
teriously ; and that he knew was thick tufty woodland. Xot 
a light shone from the village ; not a footstep sounded in its 
straggling street. 

Otto commenced to pace up and down with solitary regu- 
larity. One o'clock j half past one ; two. Well, it was lonely 
up there, after all. — Ting tang, ting tang, ting tang. A quar- 
ter to three. Swoop came a sudden gust of wind, and wailed 
for a minute or two through the loop-holes and crannies of 
the spire, and the weathercock creaked up aloft complaining- 
ly. Then the atmosphere grew dead calm. It was darker 
than ever. The sun would rise at about a quarter of four. 
Otto knew that. He knew also that, according to the saying, 
"it is always darkest the hour before day." In a little more 
than an hour would come daylight and his release together. 

Hark ! What was that sound, rising upward from the vil- 
lage ? That was surely the roll of a drum ] A single horse 
clattered up the street. Then there was a bugle-call, dis- 
tinctly audible in the motionless air. Lights twinkled in 
more than one casement. What was going on 1 The idea of 



334 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

a sudden night-attack by the enemy came into the head of the 
solitary sentinel watching from the tower ; but after a while 
he dismissed it. There was no sharp crack of a rifle-volley, 
no crashing of a body of cavalry, no heavy rumbling artillery 
over the roads. Neither were any voices to be heard, such 
as would have arisen from the terrified villagers under such 
circumstances as their home being suddenly turned into a 
battle-ground. 

Otto knelt down, and, leaning his chin on the parapet, lis- 
tened intently. Surely men were gathering on the open space 
around the tower. Yes ; more and more distinctly he could 
hear the sound of footsteps. Then another sharp, sudden 
roll of drums, startling the echoes far and wide. Again a 
momentary silence. A loud, clear voice giving out the word 
of command, " March ! " — the measured tramp of feet, grow- 
ing fainter as it receded from the village ; doors and casements 
closed with a rattling noise ; then again profound, and, thence- 
forward, unbroken silence. 

" Strange ! " thought Otto, as he rose from his knees, after 
some time. " They must be sending a detachment on toward 
the frontier. And yet we were so few here, I wonder that 
they thought it well to divide so small a body." As he turned 
to resume his march, the first streaks of dawn broke through 
the darkness in the east, and some birds began to stir in their 
nests amidst the stone-work of the steeple. 

Ting tang, ting tang, ting tang, ting tang. Four o'clock in 
the morning ! Cocks were crowing lustily down below. The 
swallows were all alive, and darted hither and thither through 
the fast brightening sky. The chattering of garrulous daws 
grew more and more voluble, as they flew with busy, flapping 
wing in and out of their haunts on the spire. 

Silver-gray ; rose-color ; glowing purple and crimson ; bright, 
gorgeous, dazzling gold ! There was the sun at last, burnish- 
ing the old copper weathercock into temporary brilliancy, 
and making the river — steely pale erewhile — flash and flow 
like molten silver. Why, in Heaven's name, did they not 
come to relieve the guard 1 There was Otto, however, and 



THE SENTRY ON THE TOWER. 335 

there it behooved him to remain. His duty was clear ; and a 
duty that was clear he had never flinched from. 

It was full, broad day. The old clock reported the hour to 
be half past six. The good people of Goldenau were stirring 
about their daily employments. A great portion of the high- 
way to the village could be seen from the belfry. But neither 
in the near streets and lanes, nor on the distant road, could 
Otto discern a glimpse of a soldier's uniform. Not a dark 
blue coat was to be seen anywhere. What did it mean? 
What could have become of all his comrades? 

On the other hand, there was an unusual gathering of the 
citizens on the public square around the tower. Otto's keen 
eyes could plainly see the gestures and the expression of their 
faces, and he observed that he himself was obviously the sub- 
ject of some discussion among them ; for every now and then 
an old, stout, stolid-looking man, whom he (Otto) recognized 
as the burgomaster of the place, raised his arm and pointed 
upward to where the Prussian sentry's form was sharply re- 
lieved against the sky on the summit of the belfry-tower. 

A faint suspicion of the truth began to dawn in Otto's 
mind. He examined his cartridge-box, and made sure that 
his rifle was in good working order. Then he stood quite still 
at " attention," waiting for what should come next. 

What did come next was that the burgomaster advanced 
singly from the little crowd of men, on whose skirts a num- 
ber of women and children were by this time hovering, and, 
putting his hollowed hands to his mouth, bellowed out a long 
speech, addressed to Otto upon the tower. The long speech 
had the effect of making the stout burgomaster very red in the 
face, and of exciting very evident approbation among his fel- 
low-citizens ; but, further than that, it produced no result 
whatever. 

Otto shook his head and touched his ears, to signify that he 
could not hear, and then stood still again. Upon this the 
burgomaster, after giving an angry shrug at the deplorable 
waste of his eloquence, beckoned, and waved his arms with an 
imperious gesture of command, importing that the sentry was 



336 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

at once to descend from the altitude of the tower, and appear 
in his, the great man's presence on terra firma. To this Otto 
vouchsafed no kind of reply, but shouldered his rifle, and 
coolly resumed his march up and down on the leaden roof. 
Coolly in appearance, that is to say ; for, as may be imagined, 
his position was not a pleasant one, and he had shrewd mis- 
givings that it would rapidly become decidedly unpleasant. 

Two things v/ere clear to him. Firstly, that the detach- 
ment of Prussians to which he belonged had left Goldenau ; 
and, secondly, that the inhabitants of the place did not ex- 
pect them to return. Otherwise, the burgomaster's swelling 
port would undoubtedly have been modified. How or why 
his comrades had gone ; whether they had remembered the 
sentinel on the belfry, and purposely left him there, intending 
to return ; or whether, in the hurry of a night-alarm, they 
had forgotten his existence, and were now in the thick of some 
hot skirmish with the foe, he could not tell. 

It was well that his course appeared clear in the matter, 
and that he needed no long time to decide upon what he should 
do, for this is what happened as soon as the burgomaster and 
the assembled crowd on the square clearly perceived, by the 
sentry's resumption of his march up and down, that he in- 
tended to pay no attention to their summons. First the great 
man drew back a little from the foot of the tower, and there 
gathered around him a group of the chief inhabitants of the 
place, who forthwith entered into an animated discussion, as 
far as could be gathered by their gestures. Then the burgo- 
master, being apparently urged into the van by those behind 
him, advanced with stately, although rather slow footsteps to 
the postern-door, which gave access to the winding staircase 
of the tower. 

Otto peeped over the parapet, and saw the burgomaster 
enter, followed by four or five other men. He was quite un- 
certain what would be the nature of the colloquy he was now 
to hold with the authorities of Goldenau, but he opined that 
it would probably not be a pacific one. But he would defend 
himself to the uttermost, and had no more idea of abandon- 



THE SENTRY ON THE TOWER. 337 

mg his post on the belfry without due authority from his 
superiors, than a brave sea-commander has of deserting the 
deck of his vessel. So he fixed his bayonet firmly, looked to 
the priming of his piece, and set himself with his back to the 
steeple, and exactly facing the low doorway which gave access 
to the roof of the tower. 

" There 's no hurry," he told himself, "for the burgomaster 
is in the van, and it will take him some time to climb all 
those steps, even if he does not stick by the way in the nar- 
row staircase." 

In a few minutes he could hear the panting and puffing of 
the stout burgomaster, and the sound of his footsteps scrap- 
ing heavy and springless on the stone steps. Quick as light- 
ning Otto sprang to the doorway ; pulled open the heavy 
oaken door, which opened outward ; and remained with fixed 
bayonet directed toward the winding staircase. 

" Yield, Prussian ! " cried the burgomaster, huskily. He 
was not yet in sight, being hidden by a turn of the stairs. 

" Who goes there?" answered Otto. " Speak, or I fire ! " 

" For Heaven's sake, don't fire ! don't fire ! " 

There was a hustling noise on the steps, and a thud, as of 
some heavy body coming violently in contact with the wall. 

"Oh!" exclaimed the voice of one in acute pain. "You 
have crushed my foot, Mr. Burgomaster ! Let me go on if 
you 're afraid. I '11 tackle him ! " 

Thereupon the head and shoulders of the miller of Golde- 
nau appeared in the open doorway. 

" Go back there, unless you want my bayonet in your body. 
Back, I say ! " 

Otto made so threatening and resolute an advance that the 
miller withdrew in his turn, though much less precipitately 
than his predecessor, and remained on a lower step, so that 
nis flour-dusted head alone was visible from the door on the 
i-oof. 

" Come, sentry," said the miller, " don't be a fool ! We 
have something to say to you. You can't refuse to listen." 

** I don't know that. You have no business to talk to a 



338 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

sentry on guard. And for that matter, you have no business 
here at all." 

" Perhaps you are not aware of one circumstance," said 
the miller, with something like a sneer ; " namely, that your 
friends have abandoned you here altogether. They are on 
their march into Bohemia." 

" Enough talk ! I have nothing to say to you." 

" Indeed ! But I have something to say to you. You are 
our prisoner ! " 

"Pooh!" 

The burgomaster's voice was heard from the lower steps, 
coming muffled by the thick wall. " Hallo, there ! Is that 
Prussian rascal to keep us here all day % Why don't you 
bring him down 1 " 

" He won't come ! " 

" Won't come 1 Nonsense ! Drag him down ! " 

" Would you like to try it, Mr. Burgomaster? " 

" The first man who advances within three steps of the 
doorway I will send my bayonet into," said Otto. 

The miller redescended to his friends. The position was 
rather difficult. The staircase wound like a corkscrew, and 
was very narrow withal ; so that it was impossible to advance 
up it otherwise than in single file. Now, although en masse 
the Goldenauers were exceedingly anxious to perform the 
glorious exploit of taking a prisoner of war, no man was to 
be found willing to risk his individual life in the attempt. 

" It would be useless for a broad-built man like myself to 
venture into the clutches of the rascal," said the burgomas- 
ter, looking wistfully at the spare figure of a man in the rear ; 
" but if any light, slim, agile person were to make one spring, 
one sudden spring, so as to take the Prussian off his guard, 
I have no doubt the fellow would be captured easily, quite 
easily." 

There was a dead pause. All at once the tavern-keeper 
made a brilliant suggestion. Why should they not reduce 
the enemy by famine 1 The idea was received with enthu- 
siasm. It was resolved that the contumacious sentry should be 



THE SENTRY ON THE TOWER. 339 

informed that he would remain aloft there without a bit or 
drop until such time as he chose to submit himself to the 
civic authorities, and deliver up his needle-gun into their 
hands. 

Otto listened with grave attention to the decision of the 
council of war. Then, after a short pause of deliberation, he 
made answer thus : — 

" I am right sorry to find the Goldenauers showing such a 
bad spirit, and being so blind to which is the good side for 
the cause of Fatherland. Also I think it my duty to warn 
you that this trick of yours may have unpleasant consequen- 
ces to yourselves when my comrades come to relieve me, — as 
of course they will. But as to your threat of starving me 
out, that 's all nonsense. I have a good supply of cartridges ; 
I am a good shot ; this tower commands the square, and all 
the little lanes leading to it ; — and unless I am fed, and well 
fed, I swear to you solemnly that I will pick off every hu- 
man being who approaches within a hundred yards of the 
well yonder to draw water. There ; deliver that message as 
my answer to the burgomaster, and try to persuade him that 
I mean what I say." 

With ludicrously chapfallen aspect the miller carried these 
bold, resolute words to his companions. Deliberations fol- 
lowed, hastened by the shrill importunities of all the women 
of Goldenau, who had somehow got wind of the matter, and 
who would rather, so they said, feed twenty Prussians than 
expose the lives of their husbands and children, not to men- 
tion their own. The result was, that Otto was left to sustain 
a siege on the top of the belfry, — a siege with- the unusual 
circumstance that the besiegers were supplying the garrison 
with victuals. 

For two days this singular state of things lasted ; the sen- 
tinel being formally called upon, morning and evening, to yield 
himself up prisoner, and the citizens being as formally warned 
that on any failure in the supply of food, the deadly needle- 
gun should do terrible execution on them and theirs. On the 
third day the regiment returned, and the guard was relieved. 



340 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

When Otto descended from his airy station and appeared 
on the square, his comrades there assembled greeted him with 
a hearty ringing " Hurrah ! " And his captain said a few kind 
words, applauding his fidelity and endurance. That was all. 
The explanation of his having been abandoned was simply 
that in the hurry of an unexpected summons he had been 
forgotten. An outpost had received warning of an intended 
attack by a party of Austrian cavalry. Their commander 
had sent for assistance to the nearest Prussian detachment. 
The contemplated attack had not taken place, however, and 
Otto's regiment was now in full march to join the main army. 



BETSY AND I ARE OUT.— Will M. Carleton. 

DRAW up the papers, lawyer, and make 'em good and stout ; 
Things at home are cross-ways, and Betsy and I are out. 
We who have worked together so long as man and wife 
Must pull in single harness the rest of our nat'ral life. 

" What is the matter 1 " say you. I swan ! it 's hard to tell ! 
Most of the years behind us we 've passed by very well. 
I have no other woman, she has no other man ; 
Only we 've lived together as long as we ever can. 

So I have talked with Betsy, and Betsy has talked with me ; 
So we 've agreed together that we can't never agree. 
Not that we 've catched each other in any terrible crime ; 
We 've been a gatherin' this for years, a little at a time. 

There was a stock of temper we both had, for a start, 
Though we ne'er suspected 't would take us two apart. 
I had my various failings, bred in flesh and bone ; 
And Betsy, like all good women, had a temper of her own. 

First thing I remember whereon we disagreed 

Was somethin' concernin' heaven, — a difference in our creed. 



BETSY AND I ARE OUT. 341 

We arg'ed the thing at breakfast, we arg'ed the thing at tea; 
And the more we arg'ed the question, the more we did n't agree. 

And the next that I remember was when we lost a cow ; 
She had kicked the bucket for certain, — the question was 

only — how 1 
I held my own opinion, and Betsy another had ; 
And when we were done a talkin', we both of us was mad. 

And the next that I remember, it started in a joke ; 
But full for a week it lasted, and neither of us spoke. 
And the next was when I scolded because she broke a bowl ; 
And she said I was mean and stingy, and had n't any soul. 

And so that bowl kept pourin' dissensions in our cup ; 
And so that blamed old cow was always a comin' up ; 
And so that heaven we arg'ed no nearer to us got, 
But it gives us a taste of somethin' a thousand times as hot. 

And so the thing kept workin', and all the selfsame way ; 
Always somethin' to arg'e, and somethin' sharp to say. 
And down on us come the neighbors, a couple dozen strong, 
And lent their kindest sarvice to help the thing along. 

And there has been days together — and many a weary week — 
We was both of us cross and spunky, and both too proud to 



And I have been thinkin' and thinkin', the whole of the win- 
ter and fall, 
If I can't live kind with a woman, why then I won't at all. 

And so I have talked with Betsy, and Betsy has talked with 

me ; 
And we have agreed together that we can't never agree ; 
And what is hers shall be hers, and what is mine shall be 

mine, 
And I '11 put it in the agreement, and take it to her to sign. 



342 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Write on the paper, lawyer, — the very first paragraph, — 
Of all the farm and live stock, that she shall have her half ; 
For she has helped to earn it, through many a weary day, 
And it 's nothin' more than justice that Betsy has her 
pay. 

Give her the house and homestead ; a man can thrive and 

roam, 
But women are skeery critters, unless they have a home. 
And I have always determined, and never failed to say, 
That Betsy never should want a home, if I was taken away. 

There is a little hard cash, that 's drawin' tol'rable pay, — 
Couple of hundred dollars, laid by for a rainy day, — 
Safe in the hands of good men, and easy to get at ; 
Put in another clause, there, and give her half of that. 

Yes, I see you smile, sir, at my givin' her so much ; 
Yes, divorces is cheap, sir, but I take no stock in such. 
True and fair I married her, when she was blithe and young ", 
And Betsy was al'ays good to me, exceptin' with her tongue. 

Once, when I was young as you, and not so smart, perhaps, 
For me she mittened a lawyer, and several other chaps ; 
And all of 'em was flustered, and fairly taken down, 
And I for a time was counted the luckiest man in town. 

Once, when I had a fever, — I won't forget it soon, — 
I was hot as a basted turkey, and crazy as a loon, — 
Never an hour went by me, when she was out of sight ; 
She nursed me true and tender, and stuck to me day and 
night. 

And if ever a house was tidy, and ever a kitchen clean, 
Her house and kitchen was tidy, as any I ever seen, 
And I don't complain of Betsy, or any of her acts, 
Exceptin' when we 've quarrelled, and told each other facts. 



THE VOLUNTEER'S WIFE. 343 

So draw up the paper, lawyer ; and I '11 go home to-night, 
And read the agreement to her, and see if it 's all right ; 
And then in the mornin' I '11 sell to a tradin' man I know, 
And kiss the child that was left to us, and out in the world 
I'll go. 

And one thing put in the paper, that first to me did n't occur : 
That when I am dead at last, she bring me back to her, 
And lay me under the maples I planted years ago, 
When she and I was happy, before we quarrelled so. 

And when she dies, I wish that she would be laid by me ; 
And, lyin' together in silence, perhaps we will agree. 
And if ever we meet in heaven, I would n't think it queer, 
If we loved each other better for what we have quarrelled 
here. 



THE VOLUNTEER'S WIFE.— M. A. Dennison. 

"AN' sure I was tould to come to your Honor, 

-xTA_ To see if ye 'd write a few words to me Pat. 
He 's gone for a soldier, is Misther O'Connor, 
Wid a sthripe on his arm and a band on his hat. 

11 An' what '11 ye tell him 1 It ought to be asy 
For sich as yer Honor to spake wid the pen, — 

Jist say I 'm all right, and that Mavoorneen Daisy 
(The baby, yer Honor) is betther again. 

" For when he went off it 's so sick was the childer 
She niver held up her blue eyes to his face ; 

And when I 'd be cryin' he 'd look but the wilder, 

An' say, ' Would you wish for the counthry's disgrace 1 ' 

" So he left her in danger, and me sorely gratin', 
To follow the flag wid an Irishman's joy ; — 



344 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

0, it 's often I drame of the big drums a bat in', 
Ad' a bullet gone straight to the heart of me boy. 

" An' say will he send me a bit of his money, 

For the rint an' the docther's bill due in a wake ; — 

Well, surely, there 's tears on yer eyelashes, honey ! 
Ah, faith, I 've no right with such freedom to spake. 

" You 've overmuch trifling, I '11 not give ye trouble, 
I '11 find some one willin' — 0, what can it be 1 

What 's that in the newspaper folded up double 1 
Yer Honor, don't hide it, but rade it to me. 

" What, Patrick O'Connor ! No, no ! 't is some other ! 

Dead ! dead ! no, not him ! 'T is a wake scarce gone by 
Dead ! dead ! why the kiss on the cheek of his mother, 

It has n't had time yet, yer Honor, to dry. 

" Don't tell me ! It 's not him ! God, am I crazy 1 
Shot dead ! for love of sweet Heaven, say no 

0, what '11 I do in the world wid poor Daisy ! 
0, how will I live, an' 0, where will I go ! 

" The room is so dark I 'm not seem', yer Honor, 
I think I '11 go home — " And a sob thick and dry 

Came sharp from the bosom of Mary O'Connor, 
But never a tear-drop welled up to her eye. 



THE ROBBER. 

ON the lone deserted cross-road, 
Under the high crucifix, 
Stood the robber, slyly lurking ; 
In his hand his naked sabre 
And his rifle, heavy loaded. 
For the merchant would he plunder, 
Who, with his full weight of money, 



THE ROBBER. 345 

With his garments, and his rare wines, 
Came to-day home from the market. 
Down already had the sun sunk, 
And the moon peers through the cloudlets, 
And the robber stands awaiting 
Under the high crucifix. 

Hark ! a sound like angel voices, 
Soft, low sighing deep entreaty, 
Coming clear as evening bells 
Borne through the still atmosphere ! 
Sweet with unaccustomed accent 
Steals a prayer upon his ear, 
And he stands and listens anxious, — 

« thou Guide of the deserted I 
thou Guardian of the lost ones ! 
Bend, bend thy heavenly face, 
Clear as sunlight, softly smiling, 
Down on us, four little ones ; 
Fold, fold thy arms of mercy, 
Which were on the cross extended, 
Like two wings around our father, 
That no storm destroy his pathway, 
That his good steed may not stumble, 
That the robber, still and lurking 
In the forest, may not harm him. 
O Protector of the abandoned, 
thou Guide of the deserted, 
Send us home our own dear father ! n 
And the robber heard it all 

Under the high crucifix. 

Then the youngest crossing himself, 
Folding his soft hands demurely, — 
" thou dear Christ," lisps he, childlike, 
u 0, I know thou art almighty, 
Sitting on the throne of heaven, 

15* 



346 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

With the stars all glittering golden, — 
As the nurse has told me often, — 
0, be gracious, thou dear Christ ! 
Give the robbers, the rapacious, 
Give them bread, and bread in plenty, 
That they may not need to plunder 
Or to murder our good father ! 
Did I know where lived a robber, 
I would give this little chainlet, 
Give to him this cross and girdle, 
Saying, ' thou dear, dear robber, 
Take this chain, this cross, and girdle, 
That you may not need to plunder 
Or to murder our dear father ! " 
And the robber hears it all 
Under the high crucifix. 

From afar he hears approaching 
Snorting steeds and wheels swift rolling. 
Slowly then he takes his rifle, 
Slowly does he seize his sabre, 
And he stands there deeply thinking, 
Under the high crucifix. 

And the children still are kneeling, — 
" thou Guide of the deserted, 
thou Guardian of the wanderer, 
Send us home our own dear father ! w 
And the father came home riding 
All in safety, unendangered ; 
Clasps his children to his bosom, — 
Happy stammerings, kisses sweet. 

Only the bare sabre found they ; 
Found the rifle heavy loaded ; 
Both had fallen from his hand 
Under the high crucifix. 



KIT CARSON'S RIDE. 347 

KIT CARSON'S RIDE. — Joaquin Miller. 

KUN 1 Now you bet you ; I rather guess so. 
Bat he 's blind as a badger. Whoa, Pach6, boy, whoa. 
No, you would n't think so to look at his eyes, 
But he is badger blind, and it happened this wise : — 

We lay low in the grass on the broad plain levels, 

Old Revels and I, and my stolen brown bride. 

" Forty full miles if a foot to ride, 

Forty full miles if a foot, and the devils 

Of red Camanches are hot on the track 

When once they strike it. Let the sun go down 

Soon, very soon," muttered bearded old Revels 

As he peered at the sun, lying low on his back, 

Holding fast to his lasso ; then he jerked at his steed, 

And sprang to his feet, and glanced swiftly around, 

And then dropped, as if shot, with his ear to the ground, — 

Then again to his feet and to me, to my bride, 

While his eyes were like fire, his face like a shroud, 

His form like a king, and his beard like a cloud, 

And his voice loud and shrill, as if blown from a reed, — ■ 

" Pull, pull in your lassos, and bridle to steed, 

And speed, if ever for life you would speed ; 

And ride for your lives, for your lives you must ride, 

For the plain is aflame, the prairie on fire, 

And feet of wild horses hard flying before 

I hear like a sea breaking high on the shore ; 

While the buffalo come like the surge of the sea, 

Driven far by the flame, driving fast on us three 

As a hurricane comes, crushing palms in his ire." 

We drew in the lassos, seized saddle and rein, 

Threw them on, sinched them on, sinched them over again, 

And again drew the girth, cast aside the macheer, 

Cut away tapidaros, loosed the sash from its fold, 

Cast aside the catenas red and spangled with gold, 

And gold-mounted Colt's,*true companions for years, 



348 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

Cast the red silk serapes to the wind in a breath, 
And so bared to the skin sprang all haste to the horse, 
As bare as when born, as when new from the hand 
Of God, without word, or one word of command, 
Turned head to the Brazos in a red race with death, 
Turned head to the Brazos with a breath in the hair 
Blowing hot from a king leaving death in his course ; 
Turned head to the Brazos with a sound in the air 
Like the rush of an army, and a flash in the eye 
Of a red wall of fire reaching up to the sky, 
Stretching fierce in pursuit of a black rolling sea, 
Bushing fast upon us as the wind sweeping free 
And afar from the desert, bearing death and despair. 

Not a word, not a wail from a lip was let fall, 

Not a kiss from my bride, not a look or low call 

Of love-note or courage, but on o'er the plain 

So steady and still, leaning low to the mane, 

With the heel to the flank and the hand to the rein, 

Rode we on, rode we three, rode we gray nose and nose, 

Beaching long, breathing loud, like a creviced wind blows, 

Yet we broke not a -whisper, we breathed not a prayer, 

There was work to be done, there was death in the air. 

And the chance was as one to a thousand for all 

Gray nose to gray nose and each steady mustang 

Stretched neck and stretched nerve till the hollow earth rang 

And the foam from the flank and the croup and the neck 

Flew around like the spray on a storm-driven deck. 

Twenty miles ! thirty miles ! .... a dim distant speck .... 

Then a long reaching line and the Brazos in sight, 

And I rose in my seat with a shout of delight. 

I stood in my stirrup and looked to my right, 

But Bevels was gone ; I glanced by my shoulder 

And saw his horse stagger ; I saw his head drooping 

Hard on his breast, and his naked breast stooping 

Low down to the mane as so swifter and bolder 

Kan reaching out for us the red-footed fire. 



KIT CARSON'S RIDE. 349 

To right and to left the black buffalo came, 

In miles and in millions, rolling on in despair, 

With their beards to the dust and black tails in the air. 

As a terrible surf on a red sea of flame 

Rushing on in the rear, reaching high, reaching higher, 

And he rode neck to neck to a buffalo bull, 

The monarch of millions, with shaggy mane full 

Of smoke and of dust, and it shook with desire 

Of battle, with rage and with bello wings loud 

And unearthly, and up through its lowering cloud 

Came the flash of his eyes like a half-hidden fire, 

While his keen crooked horns through the storm of his mane 

Like black lances lifted and lifted again ; 

And I looked but this once, for the fire licked through, 

And he fell and was lost, as we rode two and two. 

I looked to my left then, and nose, neck, and shoulder 
Sank slowly, sank surely, till back to my thighs ; 
And up through the black blowing veil of her hair 
Did beam full in mine her two marvellous eyes 
With a longing and love, yet a look of despair, 
And a pity for me, as she felt the smoke fold her, 
And flames reaching far for her glorious hair. 
Her sinking steed faltered, his eager ears fell 
To and fro and unsteady, and all the neck's swell 
Did subside and recede and the nerves fall as dead. 
Then she saw that my own steed still lorded his head 
With a look of delight, for this Pache, you see, 
Was her father's, and once at the South Santafee 
Had won a whole herd, sweeping everything down 
In a race where the world came to run for the crown ; 
And so when I won the true heart of my bride, — 
My neighbor's and deadliest enemy's child, 
And child of the kingly war-chief of his tribe, — 
She brought me this steed to the border the night 
She met Revels and me in her perilous flight 
From the lodge of the chief to the north Brazos side ; 



350 PUBLIC AND PARLOR READINGS. 

And said, so half guessing of ill as she smiled, 

As if jesting, that I, and I only, should ride 

The fleet-footed Pache, so if kin should pursue 

I should surely escape without other ado 

Than to ride, without blood, to the north Brazos side, 

And await her, — and wait till the next hollow moon 

Hung her horn in the palms, when surely and soon 

And swift she would join me, and all would be well 

Without bloodshed or word. And now as she fell 

From the front, and went down in the ocean of fire, 

The last that I saw was a look of delight 

That I should escape, — a love, — a desire, — 

Yet never a word, not a look of appeal, 

Lest I should reach hand, should stay hand or stay heel 

One instant for her in my terrible flight. 

Then the rushing of fire rose around me and under, 

And the howling of beasts like the sound of thunder, — 

Beasts burning and blind and forced onward and over, 

As the passionate flame reached around them and wove her 

Hands in their hair, and kissed hot till they died, — 

Till they died with a wild and a desolate moan, 

As a sea heart-broken on the hard brown stone. 

And into the Brazos .... I rode all alone, — 

All alone, save only a horse long-limbed, 

And blind and bare and burnt to the skin. 

Then just as the terrible sea came in 

And tumbled its thousands hot into the tide, 

Till the tide blocked up and the swift stream brimmed 

In eddies, we struck on the opposite side. 

Sell Pache, — blind Pache 1 Now, mister, look here, 

You have slept in my tent and partook of my cheer 

Many days, many days, on this rugged frontier, 

For the ways they were rough and Camanches were near 5 

But you 'd better pack up ! Curse your dirty skin ! 

I could n't have thought you so niggardly small. 

Do you men that make boots think an old mountaineer 



THE VOICE. 351 

On the rough border born has no tum-tum at all ? 
Sell Pache ? You buy him ! A bag full of gold ! 
You show him ! Tell of him the tale I have told ! 
Why he bore me through fire, and is blind, and is old ! 
Now pack up your papers and get up and spin, 
And never look back. Blast you and your tin ! 



THE VOICE. — FORCEYTHE WlLLSON. 

A SAINTLY Voice fell on my ear 
Out of the dewy atmosphere : 
K hush, dear Bird of Night, be mute ; 
Be still, throbbing heart and lute ! " 
The Night-Bird shook the sparkling dew 
Upon me as he ruffed and flew ; 
My heart was "still almost as soon, 
My lute as silent as the moon ; 
I hushed my heart and held my breath, 
And would have died the death of death 
To hear, — but just once more, — to hear 
That Voice within the atmosphere. 

Again the Voice fell on my ear 

Out of the dewy atmosphere. 

The same words, but half heard at first, 

I listened with a quenchless thirst, 

And drank as of that heavenly balm, 

The Silence that succeeds a psalm ; 

My soul to ecstasy was stirred, 

It was a voice that I had heard 

A thousand blissful times before, 

But deemed that I should hear no more 

Till I should have a Spirit's ear 

And breathe another Atmosphere. 

Then there was Silence in my ear, 
And Silence in the atmosphere ; 



352 PUBLIC AND PAKLOR READINGS. 

And silent moonshine on the mart, 
And peace and silence in my heart; 
But suddenly a dark Doubt said, 
" The fancy of a fevered head ! " 
A wild, quick whirlwind of desire 
Then wrapt me as in folds of fire ; 
I ran the strange words o'er and o'er, 
And listened breathlessly once more ; 
And lo, the third time, I did hear 
The same words in the atmosphere ! 

They fell and died upon my ear 

As dew dies on the atmosphere ; 

And then an intense yearning thrilled 

My Soul, that all might be fulfilled : 

" Where art thou, Blessed Spirit, where t 

Whose Voice is dew upon the air ! " 

I looked, around me, and above, 

And cried aloud, " Where art thou, Love ? 

0, let me see thy living eye, 

And clasp thy living hand, or die ! " 

Again, upon the atmosphere, 

The selfsame words fell, " / Am Here / " 

" Here 1 Thou art here, Love ! " " / Am Here 1 " 

The echo died upon my ear ; 

I looked around me, — everywhere ; 

But, ah ! there was no mortal there ! 

The moonlight was upon the mart, 

And Awe and Wonder in my heart ! 

I saw no form ! — I only felt 

Heaven's Peace upon me as I knelt ; 

And knew a Soul Beatified 

Was at that moment by my side ! 

And there was Silence in my ear, 

And Silence in the atmosphere ! 



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Treatment Date: Nov. 2007 



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